Close up of 5 white piglets in a row in front of low concrete wall facing viewer Close up of 5 white piglets in a row in front of low concrete wall facing viewer

Decision Tools Help Producers Analyze Cost of Swine Mortality for Operations Improvement

Generating Production Systems Solutions
Generating Production Systems Solutions

Program Contact

Dr. Jasmine Bruno
jbruno@foundationfar.org

Year Awarded  2018

FFAR award amount   $999,772

Total award amount   $1,999,772

Location   Ames, Iowa

Matching Funders   National Pork Board

  • Production Systems

Increasing U.S. Pork Producers’ Profits by Improving Pig Survivability

An estimated 30 to 35% of commercial pigs die before reaching the market, creating significant economic losses for farmers and presenting a major challenge to animal wellbeing and sustainability. Historically, reducing mortality has been difficult to achieve due to insufficient knowledge of the underlying causes of death and lack of proven and effective adoption and implementation strategies to prevent these deaths. The project seeks a full understanding of the biological mechanisms that limit pig and sow survivability, how they interact and how they can be effectively improved. It also includes the development and dissemination of strategies and information that can be used to maximize pig survivability. The project’s goal is to reduce overall mortality nationally by 1% or more per year over the five-year study. Increasing the wean-to-finish survival of animals by 1% would represent an estimated gain in productivity of approximately 1.2 million pigs a year for the nation’s swine industry.

Lowering Mortality Rates Can Improve Profitability & Improve Animal Welfare

While this is a clear animal welfare problem, it is also one of the most important productivity and economic issue for producers. Profitable pig production depends on producing pigs to market, with costs below market price. Lowering mortality rates can improve potential profitability. However, experienced pig producers know that mortality is a cost by its very nature and by efforts to reduce it.

Jason Ross

This project is a great example of industry leadership coming together to address emerging issues through university and industry research partnerships.

Dr. Jason Ross
Lloyd Anderson Endowed Professor in Physiology and director of the Iowa Pork Industry Center at Iowa State

Details About This Research

Improving Pig Survivability is a five-year project led by Dr. Jason Ross, the Lloyd Anderson Endowed Professor in Physiology and director of the Iowa Pork Industry Center at Iowa State, and includes scientists from Iowa State, Kansas State University and Purdue University. The project’s interdisciplinary team includes faculty and staff in research and extension, including animal science, veterinary medicine, economics and microbiology, who are collaborating with the swine industry, including producers and allied industry partners to increase U.S. pork producers’ profits by improving the survivability of their animals.

Research efforts in this project seek to identify factors contributing to swine mortality in commercial production and develop strategies and information that can be utilized to reduce mortality and maximize pig survivability. The team is also working to disseminate the information learned through this project through extension and training efforts, many of which will be available on www.piglivability.org.

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