Six strategies for raising swine in summer
Swine success is never simple. Every season serves a new set of stressors. Fall feels friendly with crisp air and steady gains. Summer, however, sizzles with setbacks.
Heat is the headline hazard.
For pigs post-weaning, the comfort corridor sits between 65º and 75º F. In that thermoneutral zone, metabolism is mellow, feed intake is steady and body heat production is low. Step beyond that sweet spot and stress stacks up fast. Pigs pant to purge heat. They drink more and dine less. Activity drops.
Inside the animal, the shifts are sharp. Cortisol climbs. Oxidative stress surges. Inflammation increases. Blood pH drifts toward respiratory alkalosis. Gut blood flow falls. Intestinal integrity loosens.
The result is not just a welfare worry. It’s a financial fracture marked by poorer performance, compromised carcass quality and mounting mortality.
The gut is an early casualty of summer strain. It absorbs nutrients and blocks bacteria and toxins. When heat harms that barrier, both nutrition and immunity falter.
Feed faces fierce foes too. Warmth and moisture make perfect conditions for mold growth. Nutrients decline. Vitamins vanish. Mycotoxins may damage the intestine and impair immunity. Fat rancidity further frustrates performance by lowering available energy and depleting fat-soluble vitamins. What looks adequate on paper can crumble in the bin.
Summer also shifts disease dynamics. Gastric ulcers and ileitis caused by Lawsonia intracellularis often increase in warmer months. Salmonellosis tends to favor summer in growing pigs. Erysipelas cases may be fewer yet sometimes more severe. Vigilance must not wilt with the weather.
To tame the heat and protect performance, focus on six sharp strategies:
- Adapt the formula for the season.
When intake decreases, density must increase. Formulate nutrient dense diets so pigs receive what they need in fewer bites. Raise energy strategically, often by increasing fat and carefully balancing amino acids if crude protein is reduced. Feed during cooler hours to boost appetite and limit waste.
- Supplement with smart support.
Vitamins A, C and E strengthen antioxidant defenses strained by heat. Selenium supports oxidative stability. Balance key minerals such as calcium, zinc, phosphorus, magnesium and chromium to counter losses and curb cortisol. Add electrolytes like sodium bicarbonate or potassium chloride to steady acid base balance during heavy panting.
- Address the immune system.
Heat hampers vaccine response and pathogen resistance. Review vaccination protocols. Run periodic diagnostics. Monitor titers and technique. Support immunity with balanced amino acids, trace minerals and targeted additives such as beta glucans introduced before peak heat.
- Focus on diseases through recordkeeping.
Summer sickness shifts by farm and geography. Detailed data detect trends early and guide timely vaccination and intervention. Records turn guesswork into guided action.
- Ensure ample clean water.
Water is the simplest summer solution. Provide abundant access with proper pressure and well-maintained drinkers. Flush lines regularly to keep water cool and clean. As water intake rises, feed intake often follows.
- Provide proper ventilation & space.
Remove heat aggressively. Maintain clean fan blades, tight belts and lubricated bearings. Seal barns to support uniform airflow. Reduce stocking density during extreme heat and handle pigs during cool morning or evening hours.
Summer will always test tenacity. With mindful management, nimble nutrition and health-centered husbandry, producers can protect pig welfare and preserve performance. When details are deliberate, pigs can prosper even under a blazing sun.
by Enrico Villamaino