Difference between revisions of "Pig" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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[[Image:Hog confinement barn interior.jpg|frame|right|Intensively farmed pigs in batch pens]]
 
[[Image:Hog confinement barn interior.jpg|frame|right|Intensively farmed pigs in batch pens]]
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===Other uses===
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Pigs have been used to find [[fungus|truffles]], to herd sheep, to flush out game for hunters, and as performers in circuses and movies.  Because of their anatomical similarity to humans in many respects they have been used in medical experiments.  Pig heart valves are transplanted into human hearts and pig livers have saved human lives by being linked to failed livers of human patients in a process called "porcine perfusion" (Watson 2004).
  
 
===As pets===
 
===As pets===
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===Breeds of pigs===
 
===Breeds of pigs===
[[Image:Adelaide champion Berkshire boar 2005.jpg|thumb|right|Champion Berkshire boar at the 2005 [[Royal Adelaide Show]]]]
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[[Image:Adelaide champion Berkshire boar 2005.jpg|thumb|right|Champion Berkshire boar at the 2005 Royal Adelaide Show]]
  
There are many breeds of pigs, with various charactoristics which make them suitable for different environments and uses.  In 1997 the three most popular breeds in the United States were the Duroc, the Hampshire, and the Yorkshire  (Klober 1997).
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There are many breeds of pigs, with various charactoristics which make them suitable for different environments and different desired products.  In 1997 the three most popular breeds in the United States were the Duroc, the Hampshire, and the Yorkshire  (Klober 1997).
  
 
Pigs are exhibited at agricultural shows, judged either as stud stock compared to the standard features of each breed, or in commercial classes where the animals are judged primarily on their suitability for slaughter to provide premium meat.
 
Pigs are exhibited at agricultural shows, judged either as stud stock compared to the standard features of each breed, or in commercial classes where the animals are judged primarily on their suitability for slaughter to provide premium meat.
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==Pigs in religion==
 
==Pigs in religion==
*In ancient Greece, a sow was an appropriate [[sacrifice]] to [[Demeter]] and had been her favorite animal since she had been the Great Goddess of archaic times. Initiates at the [[Eleusinian Mysteries]] began by sacrificing a pig.  
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*In ancient Egypt pigs were associated with Seth, the rival to the sun god Horus. Swineherds were forbidden to enter temples.
*The pig is one of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the [[Chinese zodiac]] related to the [[Chinese calendar]]. Believers in [[Chinese astrology]] associate each animal with certain personality traits. See: [[Pig (Zodiac)]].
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*In [[Hinduism]] the god Visnu took the form of a boar in order to save the earth from a demon who had dragged it to the bottom of the sea.
*The dietary laws of [[Judaism]] ([[Kashrut]], adj. [[Kosher]]) and Islam ([[Halal]]) forbid the eating of  flesh of swine or pork in any form, considering the pig to be an [[unclean animals|unclean animal]] (see [[taboo food and drink]]).
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*In ancient Greece a sow was an appropriate sacrifice to Demeter and had been her favorite animal since she had been the Great Goddess of archaic times. Initiates at the Eleusinian Mysteries began by sacrificing a pig.  
 +
*The pig is one of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. Believers in Chinese astrology associate each animal with certain personality traits.
 +
*The dietary laws of [[Judaism]] and [[Islam]] forbid the eating of  flesh of swine or pork in any form, considering the pig to be an unclean animal.
 +
*In [[Christianity]] pigs are associated with Saint Anthony, the patron saint of swineherds.
  
 
==Environmental impacts ==
 
==Environmental impacts ==
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==References==
 
==References==
 
*Clutton-Brook, J. 1999. ''A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals''. Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521634954
 
*Clutton-Brook, J. 1999. ''A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals''. Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521634954
*Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). 2006. ''FAOStat'' Website. [http://faostat.fao.org/site/340/DesktopDefault.aspx?PageID=340]
 
 
*Huffman, B. 2006. ''The Ultimate Ungulate Page'' Website [http://www.ultimateungulate.com]
 
*Huffman, B. 2006. ''The Ultimate Ungulate Page'' Website [http://www.ultimateungulate.com]
 
*Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG). 2006.  "Global Invasive Species Database: Sus scrofa" [http://www.issg.org/database/species/ecology.asp?si=73&fr=1&sts=sss]
 
*Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG). 2006.  "Global Invasive Species Database: Sus scrofa" [http://www.issg.org/database/species/ecology.asp?si=73&fr=1&sts=sss]

Revision as of 01:26, 17 November 2006

Pig
Sow with piglet
Domestic sow with piglet
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Suidae
Genus: Sus
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

Sus ahoenobarbus Palawan bearded pig
Sus barbatus Bornean bearded pig
Sus bucculentus Heude's pig, Vietnam warty pig
Sus cebifrons Visayan warty pig
Sus celebensis Celebes pig, Sulawesi warty pig
Sus oliveri Mindoro warty pig
Sus philippensis Philippine warty pig
Sus salvanius Pygmy hog
Sus scrofa Eurasian wild boar

Sus scrofa domesticus Domestic pig

Sus verrucosus Javan warty pig

Pigs are members of the genus Sus, within the Suidae family. They are even-toed ungulates, hoofed mammals, native to Eurasia and Africa. Pigs, in the wild, live mostly in forests and savannas and play an important role in nature. The domestic pig, Sus scrofa domesticus, was one of the first animals domesticated by humans and is still today one of the most important domestic animals.

Description and behavior

Pigs are one of the most widespread and successful genera of large mammals. They are found wild over most of Eurasia from tropical jungles to northern forests. The Eurasian wild boar, Sus scrofa, has the largest range of any wild ungulate (Watson 2002). There are 10 species of living pigs and many subspecies. The Pygmy hog of India, Sus salvanius, is about 20 to 30 cm (8 to 12 in) high at the shoulder and weighs 7 to 12 kg (15 to 26 lbs) while the Eurasian wild boar can be from 55 to 110 cm (1.8 to 3.6 ft) high at the shoulder and weigh from 44 to 320 kg (91 to 711 lb) (Huffman 2006).

Unlike most other hoofed mammals, pigs do not have multi-chambered ruminating stomachs and can not survive on leaves and grasses alone. Instead they are omnivores, which means that they consume both plants and animals. They eat a wide variety of foods including acorns and other seeds, green vegetation, roots, tubers, fungi, fruit, carrion, eggs, insects, and small animals - snakes being a favorite. Occasionally, in times of shortage, a mother pig may eat her own young.

A typical pig has a large head with a long snout which is strengthened by a special bone called the prenasal bone and by a disk of cartilage in the tip. The snout is used to dig into the soil to find food and is a very sensitive sense organ. Pigs have a full set of 44 teeth. The canines, called tusks, grow continually and become very sharp by the lowers and uppers rubbing against each other (Nowak 1983).

Pigs are very intelligent. Animal behavior expert Dr. Lyall Watson writes (Watson 2004): "Pigs have a proportionally larger brain than sheep, goats, or antelope and they also posses more of that part of the brain that governs the ability to reason. Pig brains are not unlike our own."

Pigs are social animals. In the wild they live in extended family groups called "sounders". The members of a sounder communicate with each other by sight, sound, and smell and cooperate to find food and to watch for, and sometimes fight off, predators.

Pigs do not have effective sweat glands, so pigs cool themselves using water or mud during hot weather. They also use mud as a form of sunscreen to protect their skin from sunburn. Mud also provides protection against flies and parasites.

Pigs have a high reproductive rate. Females reach maturity in about a year and can have a litter of piglets, mostly 4 to 8 in the wild, every year after that. Pigs are unusual among hoofed animals in that the mother builds a nest in which to give birth and care for her young.

Domestic pig

The domestic pig (Sus scrofa domesticus) is usually given the scientific name Sus scrofa, though some authors call it S. domesticus, reserving S. scrofa for the wild boar. It was domesticated beginning about 10,000 years ago, possibally in both China and the Middle East (Clutton-Brock 1999). Domestic pigs spread across Asia, Europe, the Middle East, northern Africa, and the islands of the Pacific in ancient times. Pigs were brought to southeastern North America from Europe by Hernando de Soto and other early Spanish]] explorers. Escaped pigs became feral and were freely used by Native Americans as food. The distinction between wild and domestic animals is slight, and domestic pigs have become feral in many parts of the world (for example, New Zealand and parts of North America) and have caused substantial environmental damage.

The social and adaptable nature and omnivorous diet of the wild boar allowed early humans to domesticate it much earlier than many other forms of livestock, such as cattle. Pigs were mostly used for food, but people also used their hide for shields, their bones for tools and weapons, and their bristles for brushes.

As food

The domestic pig is farmed for its meat called pork. Products made of pork include sausage, bacon and ham. The head of a pig can be used to make head cheese. Liver, chitterlings, and other offal from pigs are also widely used for food.

In industrialized nations, domestic pigs farming has shifted away from the traditional pig farm to large-scale intensive pig farms where meat can be mass-produced. This has resulted in lower production costs, but more significant animal welfare concerns.

In developing nations, and some parts of developed nations, the domestic pig is frequently raised outdoors in yards. In some cases pigs are even raised in open fields where they are allowed to forage; they are sometimes watched by swineherds, essentially shepherds for pigs.

In 2005, the global stock of pigs (about 1,000 million total) showed China with 488.8 million head of domestic pigs, followed by the United States with 60.4 million head, Brazil with 33.2 million head, Vietnam with 27 million head, Germany with 26.9 million head, and Spain with 25.3 million head.

Intensively farmed pigs in batch pens

Other uses

Pigs have been used to find truffles, to herd sheep, to flush out game for hunters, and as performers in circuses and movies. Because of their anatomical similarity to humans in many respects they have been used in medical experiments. Pig heart valves are transplanted into human hearts and pig livers have saved human lives by being linked to failed livers of human patients in a process called "porcine perfusion" (Watson 2004).

As pets

Pigs are known to be intelligent animals and have been found to be more trainable than dogs or cats. Asian pot-bellied pigs, a smaller breed of the domestic pig, have made popular house pets in the United States beginning in the latter half of the 20th century. Regular domestic farmyard pigs have also been known to be kept indoors, but due to their large size and destructive tendencies, they typically need to be moved into an outdoor pen as they grow older. Most pigs also have an extreme fear of being picked up, but will usually calm down once placed back on the floor.

Breeds of pigs

Champion Berkshire boar at the 2005 Royal Adelaide Show

There are many breeds of pigs, with various charactoristics which make them suitable for different environments and different desired products. In 1997 the three most popular breeds in the United States were the Duroc, the Hampshire, and the Yorkshire (Klober 1997).

Pigs are exhibited at agricultural shows, judged either as stud stock compared to the standard features of each breed, or in commercial classes where the animals are judged primarily on their suitability for slaughter to provide premium meat.

File:Pigs.jpg
Domestic pigs

Pigs in religion

  • In ancient Egypt pigs were associated with Seth, the rival to the sun god Horus. Swineherds were forbidden to enter temples.
  • In Hinduism the god Visnu took the form of a boar in order to save the earth from a demon who had dragged it to the bottom of the sea.
  • In ancient Greece a sow was an appropriate sacrifice to Demeter and had been her favorite animal since she had been the Great Goddess of archaic times. Initiates at the Eleusinian Mysteries began by sacrificing a pig.
  • The pig is one of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. Believers in Chinese astrology associate each animal with certain personality traits.
  • The dietary laws of Judaism and Islam forbid the eating of flesh of swine or pork in any form, considering the pig to be an unclean animal.
  • In Christianity pigs are associated with Saint Anthony, the patron saint of swineherds.

Environmental impacts

Domestic pigs which escaped from farms or were allowed to forage in the wild, and in some cases wild boars which were introduced as prey for hunting, have given rise to large populations of feral pigs in North America, Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii and other areas where pigs are not native. The Invasive Species Specialist Group lists feral pigs as one of the world's 100 worst invasive species and says about them (ISSG 2006):

Feral pigs like other introduced mammals are major drivers of extinction and ecosystem change. They have been introduced into many parts of the world, and will damage crops and home gardens as well as potentially spreading disease. They uproot large areas of land, eliminating native vegetation and spreading weeds. This results in habitat alteration, a change in plant succession and composition and a decrease in native fauna dependent on the original habitat.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Clutton-Brook, J. 1999. A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals. Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521634954
  • Huffman, B. 2006. The Ultimate Ungulate Page Website [1]
  • Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG). 2006. "Global Invasive Species Database: Sus scrofa" [2]
  • Klober, Kelly. 1997 A Guide to Raising Pigs. Pownal, Vermont : Storey Publishing ISBN 1580170110
  • Moore, J.R. 2001. "Swine production: a global perspective" [3]
  • National Pork Board (NPB). 2006 The Daily Pork Website [4]
  • Nowak, R. M. and J. L. Paradiso. 1983. Walker's Mammals of the World. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801825253
  • Oklahoma State University (OSU). 2006 Breeds of Livestock: Swine[5]
  • University of California Museum of Paleontology (UCMP) 2006. Ungulates: Hoofed Mammals
  • Voelker, W. 1986. The Natural History of Living Mammals. Medford, New Jersey: Plexus Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0937548081
  • Watson, Lydall. 2004 The Whole Hog. New York : Smithsonian Books ISBN 1588342166


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