Pigs Cannot Handle the Heat
As temperatures increase, it not only impacts human health but also can be a major threat to swine agriculture. Researchers in 2003 estimated that heat stress results in an annual loss of about $300 million in the swine industry alone. With nine of the ten warmest years ever recorded occurring since 2005, that number has likely increased several folds.
Pigs are disproportionately affected by heat stress due to their physiology. They can only sweat at about two percent of the rate of the average human, so their ability to dissipate heat by evaporative cooling (through sweat) is virtually non-existent. Similar to canines, panting to dispel heat is one of pigs’ front line thermoregulatory responses. Another response is a shift in blood distribution so that there is more blood flow to the skin, where heat can be released at the body’s surface. While this is an effective way to release heat, it has its own set of problems. To shunt blood to the skin, blood vessels at the core constrict, resulting in reduced blood flow to essential organs. In the short term, this does protect those organs from overheating; however, if ambient temperatures remain high, the reduced oxygen can result in dysfunction. This leads to stress and reduced growth rate in pigs, profit loss to producers and price hikes for pork in the supermarket. At worst, sustained heat stress can be fatal to the animal.
Lauren Anderson examining pigs.