Download Beef Cattle Nutrition

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Beef Cattle Nutrition
Feeder and Stocker Cattle
Market Beef Lifecycle
Calves
Birth 0
Weaning
6-7
Stocker
9-10
Growing
Yearlings
12
14 and older
Finishing
Age of animal, months
Harvest
Preconditioning

Nutrition guidelines:
 Creep
feed and bring feeder into feedlot
 Palatable diet, not dusty
 Feed long-stem hay and topdress grain for a
few days
 Feed in a bunk to get used to it
Preconditioning
 Free-choice
watering system
 Loose free-choice salt
 Increased mineral needs prior to shipping
 Avoid silage or fermented feeds-smell will
drive them off
 Caution with lots of grain: acidosis, bloat,
founder
Stocker Cattle
Weaned calves that are forage-fed for a
period of time before being sold to enter a
feedlot
 For spring born calves bought in fall:

 Winter
on high-roughage diets in drylot
 Winter graze on wheat/winter oats, or fescue
 Winter on stocks (corn or milo) until gone,
then feed silage with CP (legume/supplement)
in feedlot
Other Feedstuffs

High energy supplementation, but need low starch
 Soy
hulls
 Wheat midds
 Brewers grains
 Fed up to 6 lbs/day to 500 lbs calves

Protein supplementation
 Limited

by energy, so CP may not get response
Balance between expected performance and cost
of supplementation (Feed:Gain = 5:1)
Bar F Cattle Company
Stocker cattle and preconditioning
operation in north central Arkansas
 ~1200 head at a time
 ~9000 head move through in a year
 Calves range from 400-650 lbs at start
 Calves from TN, AR, NC, KY, MO, GA, AL

Backgrounded Cattle
Transition Rations
First time calves into feedlot-goal is to
minimize disease and death loss
 Get them eating!

 Medium
quality roughage free-choice
 Plus protein supplement if needed
 After 2-3 days-add grain at rate of .5 lb/100
lbs
Market Cattle Requirements
Generally 2-3% of BW for DM intake
 CP-between 9 and 14%
 Feedlot cattle average 12-14%
 TDN-65-85%
 Calcium-0.3-0.6%
 Phosphorus-0.2-0.4%

 Considerably

higher with byproducts
Ca:P ratio of 2 (or greater):1 to avoid
urinary calculi
Backgrounded Cattle
Weaned calves placed in drylot or pasture
with more emphasis on growing than
stocker calves
 Fed grain + roughage
 Target finish is 800+ lb
 Move straight to finishing ration

Growing Cattle



Growing calves in feedlot until switched to
finishing ration
More roughage than concentrate generally
Phase 1 feeding-50-60% concentrate from 450800 lb
 Traditionally

mostly silage diet now stalks, hay
Phase 2 feeding->75% concentrate over 800 lb
(mostly grain diet)
Finishing Cattle





Target is to increase marbling-improve quality
Concentrate:roughage ratio of 85:15 or higher
Faster gains on higher concentrate diet
Increase in TDN by 10% may decrease intake
by 10%
High concentrate diets can lead to problems like
acidosis, founder, and liver abcesses
Feedlots in Iowa
Feed Additives
Feed Additives
Non-nutritive ingredients added to the diet
 Examples commonly used:

 Medications
 Flavorings
 Colorings
 Growth
promotants
 Antioxidants (preservatives)
Antibiotics

Inhibits growth of some (not all) microbes
 Continuous

inclusion-in diet all the time
Coccidiostats
 Short-term
inclusion-used to cure/treat a disease
 Examples: Tetracyclines, Tylan, Penicillin

Should antibiotics be utilized in livestock feeds?
 Bacteria
become resistant to antibiotics
 Super bugs, antibiotic treatment becomes useless
Ionophores

Commonly fed to cattle, kill certain rumen
bacteria
 Beef
cattle (cows and feedlot)
 Changes rumen bug population so can improved
feed use



Considered an antibiotic
Examples: Rumensin, Bovatec
TOXIC to horses!
Ionophores

Commonly used:
 Ralgo,


Active for 60-100 days after insertion into ear
Increased gains
 Steers

Synovex (S,H), Compudose, Revalor
8-12% and heifers 6-10%
Increased efficiency (feed to gain)
 Steers
5-8% and heifers 4-7%
Hormonal Effect Additives






MGA-fed to feedlot heifers, to suppress heat
Acts like progesterone in female cattle
P4 is pregnancy hormone- MGA tricks body
Increases gain because heifers will go off feed
during estrus- riding, etc
Approved for use to synchronize estrous cycle in
breeding females
Feed continuously and then withdraw-->estrous
Questions?