Dietary supplementation with different types of fiber in gestation and lactation: effects on sow serum biochemical values and performance
Article information
Abstract
Objective
Three types of dietary fiber were fed to sows during gestation and lactation stages to monitor their physiological and metabolic adaptations during the pre-partum period and to determine how these effects may influence the lactation period and sow performance.
Methods
Soon after breeding, 54 sows were selected and were fed with 20% supplementation as fed of wheat bran (WB), soya hulls (SH), or rice hulls (RH) in diets during gestation and lactation. Sows were weighed, backfat thickness was measured ultrasonically and jugular blood samples were collected from all sows. The litter size was equalized to 10, by fostering piglets from sows on the same treatment.
Results
Sows gained 22.0, 21.8, and 25.5 kg of net maternal body weight during gestation (for WB, SH, and RH sows, respectively; p = 0.007). There was no treatment effect on the body weight change during lactation (p = 0.158), however RH sows consumed an average of 133.66 kg of feed, WB sows took 121.29 kg and SH sows took 126.77 kg during lactation (p<0.001). The SH litters gained an average of 59.34 kg of weight during lactation, while other litters gained 51.58 and 49.98 kg (for WB and RH litters, respectively; p<0.001). Exception for aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, measured serum biochemical values were broadly in agreement with earlier reports. Despite the use of additional vegetable oil to balance the energy level, RH sows still had lower concentrations of serum triglycerides in late gestation.
Conclusion
Different types of fibrous ingredients in the gestation diet influenced most of the investigated reference values for sows. The values of serum biochemical parameters were generally not affected by fiber type during the lactation stage. The SH supplementation for sows is an effective approach to give heavier litters at birth and weaning and to increase voluntary feed intake in early lactation.
INTRODUCTION
Supplying high-fiber diets during pregnancy has been shown to improve the welfare of sows [1] and increase feed intake over the subsequent lactation period [2–4]. Recently, Meunier-Salaün and colleagues [5] summarized and concluded that provision of dietary fibers during gestation generally has a beneficial effect on the behavior and welfare of sows which are restricted-fed. Moreover, sows fed with a high-fiber diet during gestation can manage their own feed transition, choosing the lactation diet spontaneously in the week preceding parturition [6]. This indicates that a high-fiber gestation diet promotes early intake of the lactation diet. When energy intake per sow was equalized among the gestation treatments, a higher percentage of the sows fed a diet containing 50% alfalfa hay had an improved piglet survival rate [7]. However, the multiple functionalities of fiber also depend on the type of fiber, the animal’s gastric adaption and other additional requirements during metabolic processes. Inclusion of increased amounts of dietary fiber may reduce hunger of restrict-fed pregnant sows due to a reduced assimilation of energy derived from starch, at the expense of greater amounts of energy derived from short-chain fatty acids arising from microbial fermentation of non-starch polysaccharides in the large intestine [8,9].
As can be seen from the above studies, fiber does have significant effects on sow nutrition and welfare. Even though serum biochemistry has been used more frequently for routine diagnosis in humans and laboratory animals, it can also be used in domestic animals. Measuring serum biochemical parameters of farm animals can provide important information on health and metabolism [10] and is a practical diagnostic tool for assessing pathological conditions in the live animal or for monitoring the health status of groups of animals [11].
Most studies in pigs have focused on sows, and biochemical parameters are influenced by a number of different factors such as diet, stage of gestation and lactation [12] and disease [13]. However, the management, housing, feeding and genetic makeup of sows have changed dramatically in recent years. The high production levels of sows which are seen in current pig production significantly influence the health and metabolic status of the sows, and consequently have changed the serum biochemical values [11].
Altering traditional corn-soybean diets to incorporate high fiber ingredients [14,15] and modifying feeding management can improve performance of sows. Using local resources or agricultural by-products is an effective approach to reduce feed cost, as well as to minimize carbon-footprints of rations for livestock and poultry. Animal production in areas with limited grain production mostly relies on imported grains; thus, the search for locally-produced useful resources for livestock is a matter of urgency, particularly in the wake of high grain prices and increasing demand for reduction in global warming potential from agriculture. For this reason, despite possible negative impacts on performance, increasing attention has been paid to dietary fiber in monogastric animals’ nutrition due to its multiple functionalities, especially in sow diets.
Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of feeding sows with alternative agricultural by-products during gestation and lactation on their physiological and metabolic adaptations during the peripartum period, and to determine how these effects may carry over to the lactation period and relate to sow serum biochemical values and reproductive performance. It was hypothesized that, when energy intake per sow was equalized among the gestation treatments, soya hulls (SH) or rice hulls (RH) could replace wheat bran (WB) in sow diets without changing their physiological and metabolic adaptations.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animal care
The experiment was carried out at the agriculture college practical farm of the National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan. All procedures were in accordance with the Animal Production Act for Care and Use of Agricultural Animals in Research (Amended Date: 2018-12-26) and approved by the Council of Agriculture, Taiwan.
Experimental design and animal housing
From the time of weaning, sows (Large White×Landrace or Landrace×Large White) of 3rd or 4th parity were housed in group pens and fed with a commercial gestating sow diet. All sows were given daily boar contact for 15 minutes in the early morning and late afternoon. When signs of estrus were seen, the sows received two inseminations at 12 and 24 hours after a stable reaction to a “back pressure test”. The fresh semen was mixed from different Duroc boars and diluted to 50×108 sperm per 100 mL dose. At 21 and 30 days after insemination, the ultrasonic pregnancy detector PREG-TONE (Renco Corporation Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA) was used to test each sow for pregnancy. After insemination, all the experimental sows were moved to individual stalls and received experimental diets. After excluding conception failures, 54 gestating sows were used as experimental animals and allocated to one of three dietary treatments for the whole duration of the experiment. At 109 days after insemination, all gestating sows were moved to the farrowing house for 28 days of nursing, and then moved back to the previous dry sow accommodation after weaning. No hormone treatments were allowed for induction of parturition. The litter size was equalized to 10 piglets by cross-fostering at 2 to 3 days old from sows on the same treatment; other sows were made available to take surplus piglets if necessary.
Starting at 2 days after insemination, the selected sows were fed with diets containing a 20% as fed supplementation of WB, SH, or RH during gestation and lactation. The composition and chemical characteristics of the experimental diets are described in Table 1.
After mating, the sows were kept in stalls and were fed twice a day at a level to supply an equal intake of metabolisable energy. Five days before the expected farrowing date (based on 114 day gestation), the sows were moved to the farrowing house. The diet was reduced to 2.0 kg per day per sow and experimental diets continued to be fed. Any sows that did not give birth by 114 days of pregnancy continued to be fed 2.0 kg per day. Any uneaten feed was cleaned out before the next feeding, and it was not returned to the experimental animals. All feed refusals were recorded on the data sheets, and corrected to dry matter (DM, determined by drying at 60°C). From the initial day of pregnancy until parturition, sows had no feed refusals. According to NRC standards [16] on energy requirements for pregnancy and lactation the daily feed allowances, and thus feed intakes, of WB, SH, and RH sows were 2.02, 2.05, and 2.10 kg per day of the experimental rations from 1 to 80 days of pregnancy, and 2.39, 2.42, and 2.48 kg per day of the experimental rations from 81 days of pregnancy until 110 days of pregnancy, respectively. The feed was increased postpartum by 0.5 kg DM per day till sows reached ad libitum intake. During lactation, the feed amount was divided into three meals per day. No creep feed was given to piglets. After weaning, the feed amount was reduced to 3 kg per sow per day and sows were fed twice a day until rebreeding. The health of the animals was checked daily and, if necessary, sick animals were treated by the veterinarian. The sow and piglets received Hog cholera and Swine erysipelas vaccination injections at 21 days post parturition. Piglets were not subjected to teeth clipping, tail docking or castration.
Data collection
Sows were weighed and backfat thickness was measured ultrasonically (Preg-Alert Pro, Renco Corporation Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA) at the last rib, 6.5 cm from the midline on each side, at mating, 30, 80, and 110 days after insemination and at weaning. Piglets were weighed within 24 h after birth (d 0), and then at day 7, day 14, day 21, and weaning at day 28.
Blood sampling
Jugular blood samples were collected from all sows at 06:00 (before feeding) on day 80 and 110 of gestation, at 5 and 14 days post parturition and at weaning. Blood samples (10 mL) were collected in vacutainer tubes containing sodium heparin (Becton Dickinson and Company, Rutherford, NJ, USA). They were put on ice and centrifuged within 60 min at 4°C for 30 min at 3,000× g; serum was immediately recovered and frozen at −20°C until further analyses. Sow serum biochemical values of glucose, blood urine nitrogen (BUN), creatinine (Creat), total protein (TP), cholesterol (Chole), triglycerides (Trig), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and alkaline phosphatase (ALK) were measured and the test methods and reagents (MeDiPro Formosa Biomedical Technology Corp., Taipei, Taiwan) that were used to analyze these parameters are shown in Table 2. The analyses for all parameters were performed at 37°C by an automated biochemical analyzer (Automatic Analyzer, HITACHI 7150. Tokyo, Japan).
Statistical analysis
One-way analysis of variance using SPSS software [17] was used to compare the characteristics of sow serum biochemical values and performance. Comparison between treatments was done by calculating the standard error of difference between two means and least significant difference. Analysis of variance was also used to compare the characteristics of sow and piglet performance and serum biochemical parameters in sow plasma at different timepoints. The factors included in the analysis were sow dietary treatments and physiological stages. The effects of treatment on piglet performance were analyzed by analysis of variance with the litter as the experiment unit.
RESULTS
Sow and piglet performances
There were 54 sows throughout the whole experiment without any losses or replacements. They had an average of 113.4 ±0.21 days for pregnancy, and 3.28±0.26 hours for farrowing. The sows spent an average of 4.9±1.11 days before coming into heat after weaning, however only 49 sows (90.7%) were seen in heat in the subsequent breeding cycle.
Table 3 shows the treatment effects on body weight and backfat thickness changes. There was no difference between treatments in the initial body weight (p = 0.613). With the increase in days of pregnancy, WB and RH sows had a higher body weight gain at 80 days of pregnancy (p = 0.002). At 110 days of pregnancy, SH and RH sows had a higher body weight gain than WB sows (p<0.001). However, sows fed with different diets gained 22.0, 21.8, and 25.5 kg of net maternal body weight during gestation (for WB, SH, and RH sows, respectively; p = 0.007). There was no treatment effect on the body weight change during lactation (p = 0.158). The RH sows had lower backfat thickness at 80 days of pregnancy (p = 0.001) and at 110 days of pregnancy (p = 0.002). The WB sows had greater backfat thickness at weaning (p<0.001).

The effects of dietary supplementation with different types of fiber in gestation and lactation on sow body weight and backfat thickness changes
With the increase of lactation, SH and RH sows showed gradually increasing weekly feed intake, however WB sows reduced feed intake in the fourth week of lactation (Table 4). When comparing the treatments, it was seen that the sows that received soya hulls and rich hulls diets consumed more feed in the fourth week of lactation (p<0.001). The RH sows took an average of 133.66 kg of feed during lactation, while other sows took 121.29 and 126.77 kg (for WB and SH sows, respectively; p<0.001). The litter size was equalized after birth to 10 piglets, by cross-fostering from the same treatment group. The litters from SH mothers had a higher body weight at birth and gained more body weight in lactation; 11.32, 15.71, 16.24, and 16.06 kg for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th week respectively. Overall, the SH litters gained an average of 59.34 kg of litter weight during lactation, while other litters gained 51.58 and 49.98 kg (for WB and RH litters, respectively; p<0.001).
Biochemical parameters in sow serum
The average values of serum biochemical parameters at the five sampling points are presented in Table 5. The physiological stage at sampling had a significant influence on the concentrations of BUN, Creat, Chole, Trig, AST, and ALK. The Chole, AST, and ALK concentrations increased significantly across the physiological stages, with a lower concentration at 80 days of gestation (p = 0.004, p = 0.008, and p<0.001, respectively). Concentrations of BUN and Creat were higher at 80 days of gestation then subsequently decreased (p<0.001 and p<0.001, respectively).
The Trig concentration was the lowest at 80 days of gestation but higher at 110 days of gestation and 5 and 14 days of lactation (p = 0.045). When fed with different type of crude fiber, SH sows had lower BUN levels at 80 days of gestation (Table 6) and significantly higher levels of Trig and ALT at 110 days of gestation (Table 7). The values of serum biochemical parameters were mostly unaffected by fiber type differences during the lactation stage. However, the SH sows had higher ALT levels (p<0.001) and WB sows had lower ALK levels (p = 0.016) at 5 days of lactation (Table 8). The RH sows had higher TP levels (p = 0.001) and Trig levels (p = 0.007), but WB sows had lower ALT levels (p<0.001) and ALK levels (p = 0.007) at 14 days of lactation (Table 9). The values of TP (p = 0.03) and ALT (p = 0.045) were affected by fiber type differences at weaning (Table 10).

The effect of dietary supplementation with different types of fiber on serum biochemical values for 54 sows at 80 days of gestation

The effect of dietary supplementation with different types of fiber on serum biochemical values for 54 sows at 110 days of gestation

The effect of dietary supplementation with different types of fiber on serum biochemical values for 54 sows at 5 days of lactation

The effect of dietary supplementation with different types of fiber on serum biochemical values for 54 sows at 14 days of lactation
DISCUSSION
The treatment effects on sow performance
The levels of performance recorded in this experiment were similar to typical commercial performance in limited grain production areas. There were no significant differences in initial body weight. This indicates an unbiased allocation, which should be expected since animals were genetically similar and had been maintained under standard conditions until this time. In the following stages, all sows gained similar body weight but the RH sows had a higher net maternal body weight gain postpartum. These differences may be because of the different fiber consumed and utilized by the animals. Bindelle and colleagues [18] reviewed that the presence of dietary fiber lowers the apparent fecal digestibility of the crude protein and possibly the ileal digestibility, but not necessarily the efficiency of nitrogen retention by the animal. In this study, sows fed with soya hulls and RH tended to gain more body weight in late pregnancy. This may be caused by the pig’s adaptation to dietary fiber digestion, which is a long process that requires 5 weeks [19]; but energy digestibility is always higher with sows than growing pigs due to their greater gut transition time, consequent on their higher gastrointestinal tract volume combined to lower feed intake per unit live weight [20]. Besides the lower efficiency in the utilization of grain hulls energy compared to bran, the low digestibility of some fiber sources contributes to their negative impact on the density of the ration. Sows fed with RH had the worst ratio of ration DM conversion to litter weight gain at the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th weeks of lactation, and the highest DM intake during the lactation stage. These results might be because of high crude fiber content of the RH and poorer utilization of its high acid detergent fiber content. WB and SH sows raised litters with better weight gain than RH sows. This may imply that RH sows’ ration had poorer digestibility and was in agreement with Oelkle and colleagues’ results [21]. In other experiments in which the daily energy intake per sow was equalized among the gestation treatments, a greater percentage of the sows that were fed a diet containing 50% alfalfa hay completed 3 reproductive cycles, with a greater pig survival rate than control sows [7]. However, the performance of sows fed a diet containing 46% of an alfalfa-orchard grass hay mix was equal to that of control sows [22]. Additions of sugar beet pulp to the gestation diet that ranged from 25% to 50% did not improve sow performance compared with control sows when daily energy intake was equalized among treatments [3,23]. The addition of approximately 6.8% [24] or 13.35% [25] ground wheat straw as a source of fiber to a gestation diet, that was fed for respectively 5 and 3 successive parities, increased overall litter size and total litter weight at weaning compared with sows fed the control diet when basal diets intake were equalized among treatments.
In the lactation stage, sows had a similar higher body weight loss but RH sows mobilized more backfat. RH sows gained 25.5 kg maternal body weight in pregnancy, but then lost 12.8 kg body weight and lost 1.7 mm backfat thickness in lactation. The litter performance and the experimental feeding regime may explain this. There was only one type of feed for both pregnancy and lactation in each treatment and the voluntary feed intake of sows during lactation will reflect the previous feeding experience, as is well documented in lactating sows [4]. Sows chose the lactation diet spontaneously in the week preceding parturition when they were fed a fibrous gestation diet, which promotes early intake of the lactation diet [6]. However, sows fed with soya hulls need time to adapt to the dietary fiber. As can be seen, they were gaining less body weight in the first two-thirds of pregnancy.
Biochemical parameters in sow serum
It is difficult to compare the present biochemical values with those reported in the literature because of differences in study design, type of animals, analytical techniques etc. The present biochemical values are broadly in agreement with earlier reports for gilts and sows [10,11], with the exception of AST and ALT. Our study has demonstrated that different types of fiber ingredients in the diet are important factors influencing most of the investigated reference values for sows.
The increased AST concentration from 80 day of gestation to lactation could be explained by degradation and mobilization of body reserves [11]. The ranges for AST concentrations at the individual stage level and at the neural detergent fiber percentage level were very wide, especially during the lactation stage, when compared with other published ranges [26]. Verheyen and colleagues [11] explained that increased γ-glutamyl transpeptidase concentration after farrowing might be due to liver damage, as the AST concentration showed a similar increase.
The ALK concentrations were increasing with physiological stage. However, Verheyen and colleagues [11] found a decrease during the last week of gestation and values remained at a low level after farrowing. This may be caused by the fact that the high levels of histochemical phosphatase activity in the pig placenta decrease towards the end of pregnancy and are absent after farrowing. Our finding may be due to higher levels of grain hulls’ neutral detergent fiber (NDF) and acid detergent fiber (ADF) percentage in the diet; especially SH and RH sows needed to produce more enzymes for the mobilization of body reserves and nutrient degradation to compensate for lower back fat thickness resulting from the lower density feeding regime.
The decreasing serum concentration of BUN from 80 days of gestation to lactation could be explained by higher levels of grain hulls’ NDF and ADF percentage in the diet. In growing and finishing pigs, Govers and colleagues [27] found that substrates with more fermentable resistant starch or non-starch polysaccharides maintain the microbial activity throughout the entire large intestine and decrease proteolysis occurring in the distal colon. The undigested dietary proteins and the endogenous proteins are used for synthesis of bacterial proteins, and the intense bacterial growth in the intestine enhances urea transfer from the blood to the large intestine [28]. Canh and colleagues [29] recorded a urinary: facial nitrogen ratio of 3.83 with a grain-based diet vs 1.21 with a diet containing 250 g per kg feed of sugar beet pulp.
Similar to the results of Verheyen and colleagues [11], we found a decrease in serum concentration of Creat during lactation. They explained that interpretation of the urea and Creat levels was affected by the changes in glomerular filtration rate, in food quantity and quality and in muscle mass, which may have variable effects on the serum levels of these metabolites.
The cholesterol concentrations were increasing over time. WB and RH sows tended to have significantly lower concentration of Trig in late pregnancy. This was surprising in the case of the RH diet, which used additional vegetable oil to balance the energy level. Further investigation of dietary fiber containing ingredients for sow nutrition is merited.
CONCLUSION
During pregnancy, sows which were genetically similar and had been maintained under standard conditions gained different body weight and backfat thickness when fed various fibrous dietary ingredients. Besides the lower efficiency in the utilization of grain hulls’ energy compared to bran, the low digestibility of some fiber sources also contributed to their negative impact on the density of the ration. Sows fed with RH gained more maternal weight during gestation and consumed more feed during lactation. Additional vegetable oil was used in the RH diet to balance the energy level, however these sows still had a lower concentration of Trig in late pregnancy, indicating a need for further investigation of effects of dietary fiber content for sow nutrition. The sows fed with soya hulls had significantly better litter weight at birth and litter weight gain at weaning. Therefore, soya hulls can be a useful alternative to replace WB in sow diets. Use of locally obtained grain hull by-products in diets for sows may be an effective approach to reduce feed cost significantly, whilst maintaining the serum biochemical parameters at the average level and increasing voluntary feed intake in lactation.
Notes
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
We certify that there is no conflict of interest with any financial organization regarding the material discussed in the manuscript.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was carried out with the support of the Laboratory of Animal Nutrition and Energy Resource Management, Animal Science Department, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology and FORMOSA FORTUNE GROUP for providing high quality fresh semen in this study. We would especially like to thank Professor Sandra Edwards from School of Agriculture, Food & Rural Development, Newcastle University for editing of English in the final paper.