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Pig

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Domestic Pig
Sow and five piglets
Conservation status
Template:StatusDomesticated
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Suidae
Genus: Sus
Species: S. scrofa
Binomial name
Sus scrofa
Linnaeus, 1758
Synonyms

Sus domesticus

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 approximately 5,000 to 7,000 years ago. Pigs are found across Europe, the Middle East and extend into Asia as far as Indonesia and Japan. 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 caused substantial environmental damage.

Sus scrofa has four subspecies, each occupying distinct geographical areas:

  • Sus scrofa scrofa (western Africa, Europe)
  • Sus scrofa ussuricus (northern Asia and Japan)
  • Sus scrofa cristatus (Asia Minor, India)
  • Sus scrofa vittatus (Indonesia)

Pigs were brought to southeastern North America from Europe by De Soto and other early Spanish explorers. Escaped pigs became feral and were freely used by Native Americans as food.

As food

These female brood sows are confined most of their lives in gestation crates, which are too small to enable them to turn around.

The primary use of the domestic pig is as a meat animal. In industrialized nations, domestic pigs are raised in large-scale factory farms where the meat, called pork, can be mass-produced. Factory farmed pigs can spend their lives in and unnatural conditions, considered cruel and become “like machines producing piglets as if on an assembly line.

Sows can spend their lives forced into very small crates, deprived of fresh air, the sun and straw bedding. Pigs cannot root naturally in soft ground or forage for food naturally. Denying intelligent pigs their basic needs causes severe physical and psychological stress. Piglets can suffer Castration, tale docking, and tooth clipping without anaesthetic. Many of the pork products purchased in supermarkets and restaurants come from these types of farms.

Pigs in extensive growing

However, in developing nations and rural areas of developed nations, the domestic pig is frequently raised in a traditional farmyard setting. In some cases pigs are even raised in open fields where they are allowed to forage; they are watched by swineherds, essentially shepherds for pigs.

Popular food products made of pork include sausage, bacon, ham, pig knuckles, etc. 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, although their consumption is less common in certain countries, including United States.

In certain religions, especially Judaism and Islam, eating the meat of pigs is forbidden.

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 subspecies 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 tendancies, they typically need to be moved into an outdoor pen as they grow older.

Breeds of pigs

Champion Berkshire boar at the 2005 Royal Adelaide Show

Breeds within the UK

In the UK, pig breeds are generally classified into two groups:

  • Traditional
    • Berkshire
    • Hampshire
    • Large Black
    • Large White
    • Middle White
    • Tamworth
    • Wessex Saddleback
    • Chester White
    • Gloucestershire Old Spots
    • Oxford Sandy and Black
    • British Lop
    • Welsh
File:4th December 05 002.jpg
Gloucestershire Old Spots pig
  • Modern
    • Duroc
    • Landrace

Breeds outside the UK

Pig breeds outside the UK include:

  • Zungo
  • Yanan
  • West French White
  • Vietnamese Potbelly
  • Spotted
  • Red Wattle
  • Norwegian Yorkshire
  • Kune-Kune (pronounced "koonee-koonee")

See also

References

External links

en:Domestic pig

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