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Help Piglets Thrive: High-Dose Oxytocin Allows Sows to Pass on Greater Immunity

Colostrum can be the difference between life and death for a piglet. As litter size increases, colostrum intake becomes even more critical, says Bryn Anderson, a veterinary student at the University of Minnesota College of Veterinary Medicine.

“Passive transfer of immunity is one of the most critical determinants of piglet survival and early growth, yet it remains highly variable in commercial systems,” she explained at the Allen D. Leman Swine Conference. “Piglets rely entirely on colostrum for immunoglobulins, but successful intake depends on factors like sow physiology, litter size and piglet vigor.”

She says this variability means that a proportion of piglets consistently fall short of adequate immune protection.

“There has been growing interest in whether management interventions—such as administering oxytocin—could stimulate more efficient colostrum release in the immediate postpartum period,” Anderson says.

She set out to evaluate whether giving a higher dose of oxytocin would improve both colostrum quality and piglet immunoglobulin transfer, since even modest improvements could have meaningful impacts to any size of pork production.

Does Oxytocin Help?
In a systematic, controlled field trial at a commercial sow farm, Anderson enrolled 96 sows in her study and randomly assigned them to either receive a high dose of oxytocin 12–20 hours after farrowing or serve as untreated controls.

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Seaweed-Based Solutions: Building Natural Performance in Modern Swine Production

Video: Seaweed-Based Solutions: Building Natural Performance in Modern Swine Production

In today’s pork industry, producers are under increasing pressure to do more with fewer inputs—while maintaining performance, improving animal health, and meeting sustainability expectations.

we sit down with Sylvain David and Scott Preston from Olmix to explore how seaweed-based solutions are emerging as a foundational tool in modern swine nutrition.

Rather than acting as simple alternatives, these solutions are designed to support gut health, immune resilience, and overall system consistency—especially during key stress periods like weaning, feed transitions, and disease challenges.

The conversation dives into:

• What seaweed-based solutions actually are and how they work

• Why consistency and standardization matter in “natural” products

• How gut health connects to immune function and performance

• Where producers are seeing real-world impact today

• The role of natural solutions in the future of sustainable pork production