| 
	 Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domestica) - Wiki
|  | 질의: asiatic red dog | 결과: 84번째/86 |  | 
 
| 제목: | Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domestica) - Wiki 
 |  |  |    | 해상도: 2700x1790
파일크기: 1210766 Bytes
등록시간: 2007:10:16 11:42:18 | 
| Domestic pig
 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
 [Photo] Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domestica). Sow and five piglets from http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/graphics/photos/ Image Number K7974-18. This sow's five pigs developed from cryopreserved and surgically transferred embryos. Photo by Keith Weller.
 
 Order: Artiodactyla
 Family: Suidae
 Genus: Sus
 Trinomial name: Sus scrofa domestica Linnaeus, 1758
 Synonyms: Sus domestica
 
 The domestic pig (Sus scrofa domestica) is normally given the scientific name Sus scrofa, though some taxonomists use the term S. domestica, reserving S. scrofa for the wild boar. Pigs are believed to have been domesticated from wild boars as early as 7000 B.C. in the separately in China DNA evidence of semi-fossilized remains of teeth and jawbones of Neolithic pigs in Europe shows that migrating farmers brought their Near Eastern pigs with them. Modern European pigs are all descended, however, from European wild boar, showing that early European farmers soon domesticated pigs independently, from local wild stock, and the Near Eastern bloodlines entirely died out, domesticated European broodstock having then been exported in turn to the Ancient Near East. The 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 early civilizations also used the pigs' hides for shields, bones for tools and weapons, and bristles for brushes. Pigs were brought to southeastern North America from Europe by De Soto and other early Spanish explorer. Escaped pigs became feral and were used by Native Americans as food.
 
 Modern pigs are found across Europe, and extend into Asia as far as Indonesia and Japan. The distinction between wild and domestic animals is slight. Most domestic pigs usually have rather sparse hair covering on their skin, but the woolly coated breeds are known and some were popular in the past. Escaped domestic pigs have become feral in many parts of the world (for example, New Zealand) and have 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)
 
 As food
 The domestic pig is farmed for its meat called pork, which is obtained by slaughter. 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 some religions, such as Judaism and Islam, there are religious restrictions on the consumption of pork.
 
 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.
 
 Hog farmers refer to young female hogs who have borne less than two litters as gilts, female hogs who have borne more than two litters as sows, intact males as boars, castrated males as barrows, and young hogs of both sexes as pigs or piglets.
 
 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 watched by swineherds, the equivalent of shepherds for pigs.
 
 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 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. Pigs are rarely used as working animals. An exception are the so-called truffle hogs used to find truffles.
 
 Breeds of pigs
 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.
 
 List of domestic pig breeds
 American guinea hog a rare breed of heritage popular with modern homesteaders
 American Landrace
 American Yorkshire
 Angeln Saddleback
 Arapawa Island
 Ba Xuyen
 Bantu
 Bazna
 Beijing Black
 Belarus Black Pied
 Belgian Landrace
 Bentheim Black Pied
 Berkshire
 Black Slavonian
 Black Canarian Pig
 British Landrace
 British Lop
 Bulgarian White
 Cantonese
 Chester White
 Czech Improved White
 Danish Landrace
 Dermantsi Pied
 Duroc
 Dutch Landrace
 Fengjing
 Finnish Landrance
 French Landrace
 German Landrace
 Gloucestershire Old Spots
 Grice
 Guinea Hog
 Hampshire
 Hante
 Hereford
 Hezuo
 Iberian
 Italian Landrace
 Jinhua
 Kele
 Jeju Black Pig
 Krskopolje
 Kunekune
 Lacombe
 Large Black
 Large Black-white
 Large White
 Lithuanian Native
 Leicoma
 Mangalitsa
 Meishan
 Middle White
 Minzhu
 Mong Cai
 Mukota
 Mora Romagnola
 Moura
 Mulefoot
 Neijiang
 Ningxiang
 Norwegian Landrace
 Norwegian Yorkshire
 Ossabaw Island
 Oxford Sandy and Black
 Philippine Native
 Pi??train
 Poland China
 Red Wattle
 Saddleback
 Spots
 Swabian-Hall
 Swedish Landrace
 Tamworth
 Thuoc Nhieu
 Tibetan
 Tokyo-X
 Turopolje
 Vietnamese Potbelly
 Welsh
 Wessex Saddleback
 West French White
 Windsnyer
 Wuzishan
 Yanan
 Zungo
 
 Rare pig breeds
 Woolly-coated grazing pig
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_pig
 
 | The text in this page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article shown in above URL. It is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | 
 
 ^o^
 
동물그림창고 똑똑전화 누리집
^o^| 댓글 | 
|---|
 |  |  | 손님 |  |  | Scientific Name:	Sus scrofa Linnaeus, 1758 Common Names:
 English	–	Wild Boar, Eurasian Wild Pig, Ryukyu Islands Wild Pig
 French	–	Sanglier, Sanglier d'Eurasie
 Spanish	–	Jabalí
 Synonyms:
 Sus andamanensis Blyth, 1858
 Sus aruensis Rosenberg, 1878
 Sus babi Miller, 1906
 Sus ceramensis Rosenberg, 1878
 Sus domesticus Erxleben, 1777
 Sus enganus Lyon, 1916
 Sus floresianus Jentink, 1905
 Sus goramensis De Beaux, 1924
 Sus natunensis Miller, 1901
 Sus nicobaricus Miller, 1902
 Sus niger Finsch, 1886
 Sus papuensis Lesson & Garnot, 1826
 Sus ternatensis Rolleston, 1877
 Sus tuancus Lyon, 1916
 | 
 |  | 
 |