Changes in Swine Body Composition from Birth to 145 Kg

Abstract
An experiment using 81 crossbred swine was conducted to evaluate quantitative and percentage chemical compositional changes of swine from 1.5 kg (birth) to 145 kg body weight. Groups of eight pigs were sacrificed at 1.5, 6.4 and 18 kg, and then at 18 kg increments to 145 kg. Body composition was determined by grinding the entire body, minus digesta, partitioning the carcass from other body components and chemically analyzing each subsample. Results indicated that weight of the carcass increased linearly with live weight, while the total weight of the other body components increased quadratically. Percentage fat in the empty body (ingesta-free) increased rapidly from birth to weaning (6.4 kg), plateaued until 36 kg and then increased, while water percentage declined dramatically from 1.5 to 6.4 kg, but then declined more gradually to 145 kg. Percentage protein increased from birth to 18 kg, plateaued and declined after 54 kg. When expressed on a fat-free basis, the percentage water decreased in a curvilinear manner with increasing animal weight while protein increased curvilinearly inverse to the change in water. Constancy of composition (“chemical maturity”) between protein and water in the fat-free body was not attained by 145 kg. When expressed on an absolute empty body basis, water, protein and fat weight increased curvilinearly with increasing empty body weight; the rate of fat deposition increased faster during the latter growth stages while water and protein had declining deposition rates. Logarithmic and quadratic equations relating body composition to animal weight had similar R2 and lower coefficients of variation than linear or semilog functions. Gilts contained more water and less fat than barrows at similar slaughter weights, but sex differences were not apparent when expressed on a fat-free basis. The growth and fattening process was reflected in several carcass measurements. Back-fat thickness, longissimus muscle area and body length increased as pig weight increased. Copyright © 1983. American Society of Animal Science . Copyright 1983 by American Society of Animal Science