Genre
- Journal Article
Half the sows and boars on each of 5 commercial farms that had histories of seasonal infertility were given 4 g vitamin C daily. The other half was unsupplemented. Of 423 sows which were allocated to the experiment during the summer-early autumn of 1978-79, 392 were available for mating during the course of the study. Although the percentage of sows mating successfully was greater with vitamin C (68.0 vs. 61.2%), this difference was non-significant (P <0.05). Vitamin C had no effect on the weaning-to-conception interval of sows nor on the number of piglets born, born alive, stillborn and weaned per litter, pre-weaning mortality or litter and piglet weaning weight. There was no relationship between weekly average maximum temperature and the weekly percentage of successful matings. Although the results demonstrated that fertility was poor during the summer-early autumn, a large daily dose of vitamin C was ineffective in countering the seasonal infertility.
Greer, E. B.: New South Wales Dep. Agriculture, Agricultural Research and Veterinary Centre, Forest Rd., Orange, NSW 2800, Australia.
ID: 6584; Accession Number: 19871400965. Publication Type: Journal Article. Language: English. Number of References: 28 ref. Registry Number: 50-81-7, 7440-44-0. Subject Subsets: Animal Nutrition; Veterinary Science; Veterinary Science; Pig Science; Animal Breeding
Source type: Electronic(1)
Language
- English
Subjects
- infertility
- Seasons
- Swine
- hogs
- Oceania
- Australasia
- animals
- Suiformes
- New South Wales
- Sus
- SOWS
- vitamins
- eukaryotes
- CARBON
- vitamin C
- Female infertility
- Animal Nutrition (General) (LL500)
- Sus scrofa
- Chordata
- Commonwealth of Nations
- Non-Communicable Diseases and Injuries of Animals (LL860)
- Suidae
- Artiodactyla
- Animal Nutrition (Production Responses) (LL520)
- OECD Countries
- Animal Reproduction and Development (LL210) (Discontinued March 2000)
- Australia
- pigs
- ungulates
- Developed Countries
- boars
- mammals
- ascorbic acid
- vertebrates
- reproduction