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BEEF CATTLE MANAGEMENT

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BEEF CATTLE MANAGEMENT by David R. Hawkins Michigan State University Comparison of Dairy & Beef Industries Comparison of Dairy & Beef Industries U.S. BEEF INDUSTRY ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BEEF CATTLE MANAGEMENT


1
BEEF CATTLEMANAGEMENT
  • by
  • David R. Hawkins
  • Michigan State University

2
Comparison of Dairy Beef Industries
DAIRY BEEF
Biology same same
End Products Milk Meat Meat
Industry Structure Single Unit Full Time Segmented Part Time
Management Intensive Extensive
3
Comparison of Dairy Beef Industries
DAIRY BEEF
Milk Level High Mod. to Low
Breeds 1 to 5 70
Crossbreeding Rare Frequent
Use of A.I. Extensive Limited
Genetic Traits 1 Primary Multiple
4
U.S. BEEF INDUSTRY STRUCTURE
  • Seedstock
  • Commercial Cow-Calf
  • Dairy
  • Stocker/Backgrounder
  • Feedlot
  • Packer
  • Retailer
  • Consumer
  • 120,000 breeders
  • 904,000 producers
  • 117,000 farms
  • 44,000 feedlots
  • 1,250 packers
  • 250 food chains
  • 270 million

5
BEEF INDUSTRY TIMELINE
  • Conception to Calving
  • Calving to Weaning
  • Stocker/Backgrounder
  • Feedlot
  • Packer
  • Retailer
  • Consumer
  • Total
  • 9 months
  • 6 to 8 months
  • Variable (2 to 8 mo.)
  • Variable (3 to 7 mo.)
  • 3 to 7 days
  • Variable
  • Variable
  • About 30 to 32 mo.

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SIZE of CATTLE OPERATIONS
  • Dairy and feedlots tend to be full time.
  • Beef cow herds tend to be part time
  • U.S. average herd size is 38 head
  • 1 to 49 hd 28.9 of cows (78 of farms)
  • 50 to 99 hd 19.1 of cows (12 of farms)
  • 100 to 499 hd 37.1 of cows (9 of farms)
  • gt500 head 14.9 of cows (0.7 of farms)

10
BREED REGISTRATIONS 2001
  • Angus 271,222
  • Hereford 80,976
  • Limousin 49,036
  • Charolais 45,354
  • Simmental 44,159
  • Red Angus 41,900
  • Gelbvieh 32,323
  • Beefmaster 30,416
  • Brangus 25,500
  • Shorthorn 21,608
  • Brahman 15,000
  • Maine Anjou 12,267
  • S. Gertrudis 11,500
  • Salers 10,286
  • Chianina 6,679
  • T.Longhorn 6,200

11
BREED WEBSITE
  • Oklahoma State University maintains an excellent
    web page for breeds of livestock.
  • www.ansi.okstate.edu/BREEDS/index.htm

12
BEEF BREEDING SYSTEMS
  • Straight breeding
  • Crossbreeding
  • Breed complementarity
  • Heterosis or hybrid vigor
  • Individual heterosis
  • Maternal Heterosis
  • Two Breed Cross
  • Terminal Sire
  • Two Breed Rotation
  • Three Breed Rotation
  • Rotation terminal Sire
  • Composite

13
Effects of Heterosis on Lbs. of Calf Weaned per
Cow Mated
14
Example of a Three Breed Rotational System
15
BREEDING SEASON MGT. I
  • Breeding Soundness Exam
  • Natural Service with Bulls
  • Yearling 10 to 20 females
  • Two Year Old 20 to 30 females
  • Mature bull 30 to 40 females
  • Artificial Insemination
  • Less than 5 of cows in commercial herds
  • Up to 40 of cows in seedstock herds

16
BREEDING SEASON MGT. II
  • Limited season results in uniform calf crop
  • 60 days would be ideal
  • 100 to 120 days is more common
  • Michigan Beef Cows Calving by Month
  • Jan. Feb. 7.3
  • March 24.2
  • April 39.7
  • May 17.1
  • Other 11.8

17
BREEDING SEASON MGT. III
  • At weaning (7 mo.) heifers should weigh 45 of
    mature weight.
  • At breeding (15 mo.) heifers should weigh 65 of
    mature weight.
  • At calving (24 mo.) heifers should weigh 85 of
    mature weight.
  • Measure pelvic areas prior to breeding
  • Use light birth weight and low birth weight EPD
    bulls for mating to heifers

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MICHIGAN COW CALF NUTRITION
  • Pasture 5/15 to 10/30 165 days
  • 1 to 5 acres per cow calf pair
  • Harvested Forage 11/01 to 5/14 200 days
  • Corn stalk residue 30 to 60 days
  • Grass-legume hay or silage 140 to 200 days
  • Free Choice Minerals
  • Salt, Ca, P, Mg Trace Minerals
  • Clean fresh water

20
COMMON NUTRTIONAL PROBLEMS in BEEF COWS
  • Thin Cows
  • Body Condition Scores (1 to 9) 5 to 6 is ideal
  • Calving Difficulty Delayed Rebreeding
  • Dry vs. Lactating
  • Fat Cows
  • Calving Difficulty and Reduced Milk Flow
  • Legume Bloat
  • Grass Tetany

21
SEPARATE HERD INTO MANAGEMENT GROUPS
  • Bred Heifers Thin Cows
  • Dry Mature Cows
  • Lactating Cows
  • Weaned Heifer Calves
  • Mature Herd Sires
  • Young Bulls

22
HERD HEALTH PROGRAM I
  • Calving Season
  • Colostrum within first hours after birth
  • Iodine navel
  • Selenium Vitamin E
  • Scour Vaccine (E.coli 7/or Viruses)
  • Castrate Dehorn
  • Implant non replacement calves
  • Vaccinate Cows (IBR, BVD, PI3 Lepto)

23
HERD HEALTH PROGRAM II
  • Pasture and Breeding Season
  • Deworm Control Flies
  • Vaccinate heifer calves for Brucellosis
  • Consider Blackleg Malignant Edema
  • Creep feeding is optional
  • Keep free choice mineral available

24
HERD HEALTH PROGRAM III
  • Preweaning
  • Vaccinate calves for IBR, BVD, PI3, Blackleg
    Hemophilis somnus
  • Castrate and dehorn if not done earlier
  • Get calves used to eating grain drinking water
    from troughs
  • Weaning Time
  • Pregnancy check females exposed to breeding

25
HERD HEALTH PROGRAM IV
  • Booster vaccinations
  • Grub lice control
  • Late Gestation
  • Check mineral for P and Se
  • Treat for lice if they are a problem
  • Consider scour vaccine for cows bred heifers

26
RECORD KEEPING
  • 27.6 of beef cow calf operations have no records
    at all.
  • 65.2 keep records by hand
  • Source- National survey of 3,300 producers in 48
    states

27
Types of Records
  • Inventory
  • Ancestral
  • Performance
  • Birth, weaning and yearling data
  • Health
  • Vaccinations and examinations
  • Financial IRM SPA

28
EXPECTED PROGENY DIFFERENCES (EPD)
  • EPDs can be calculated for any trait that we can
    measure.
  • EPDs are estimates of the genetic ability of
    animals to transmit to their progeny
  • EPDs are expressed in the same units as the trait
    is measured
  • Analyses are done by the national breed
    associations

29
EPDs continued
  • Breed average is not 0.
  • EPDs change over time as more information enters
    the analyses.
  • Most breeds run two analyses per year.
  • They are widely used and widely accepted in the
    industry
  • Accuracy ranges from 0 to .99

30
IRM SPA
  • Integrated Resource Management (IRM) is a system
    approach to managing a farm or ranch.
  • Standardized Performance Analysis (SPA) is a way
    of analyzing records of both production and
    financial performance of a farm or ranch in order
    to make better decisions and impact profitability.

31
2000 ILLINOIS SPA SUMMARY
  • Calf Crop Weaned 82.9
  • Average Weaning Weight 486 lbs.
  • Lbs.weaned/Cow Exposed 420 lbs.
  • Annual Cow Cost 305
  • Feed cost was 209
  • Breakeven Calf Price 73/cwt.
  • Investment per cow 1,858

32
HOW TO IMPROVE PROFIT
  • Improve Reproductive Rate
  • Wean Heavier Calves
  • Wean Higher Value Calves
  • Develop Alliances and Retain Ownership
  • Reduce Cow Herd Costs
  • Use cattle inventory and price cycles in
    management decision making

33
CATTLE INVENTORY PRICE CYCLES
  • High inventory low prices
  • Low inventory high prices
  • Historically cattle inventory cycles have
    averaged 9.6 years long from peak to peak.
  • In 2001, we are at the low inventory part of this
    cycle.
  • Cow calf producers should be profitable for the
    next 4 to 5 years.

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STOCKER/BACKGROUNDER
  • Purchase weaned calves in fall, sell in the
    spring
  • Goal is 1.5 to 1.75 lb. ADG
  • Moderate energy, high roughage rations
  • Growth and normal development are the goals
    Fattening is not a goal.
  • Grazing winter wheat in the southern plains
    states from November to March
  • Wintering on hay /or silage in Michigan

36
STOCKER/BACKGROUNDER continued
  • Buy yearlings in late winter and graze in summer.
  • Goal is 180 to 300 lb. gain in 120 to 150 days
  • Some programs will combine both a winter stocker
    and summer grazing program before entering the
    feedlot.

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38
STARTING CATTLE ON FEED
  • First day begin with top quality grass hay
  • Second day top dress hay with grain or silage
  • Transition to high energy ration should be made
    over 10 to 14 days to avoid digestive upsets.
  • Dont use all NPN supplements until calves weigh
    at least 600 lbs.
  • Keep fresh feed and water available at all times

39
FEEDLOT NUTRITION
  • Grains Corn, Barley Milo
  • Roughages Corn Silage, Alfalfa Hay or Haylage
  • Protein Supplements
  • Soybean or Cottonseed Meals
  • Brewers Grains
  • Urea or Anhydrous Ammonia

40
NUTRITIONAL PROBLEMS
  • Acidosis on high energy rations
  • Ionophores (Rumensin or Bovatec) help
  • Founder (laminitis) on high energy rations
  • Bloat
  • Urinary calculi
  • Need CaP ratio gt 1.1
  • Often occurs on high energy diets

41
FEEDLOT STEERS HEIFERS
  • Steers gain 8 to 15 faster than heifers of same
    body size.
  • Steers consume 5 to 10 more feed than heifers.
  • Heifers require 2 to 10 more lbs. of feed per
    lb. of gain than steers
  • Some feeders tend to over fatten heifers
  • To be equal in profit, heifers must be purchased
    about 10 to 15 less per cwt. than steers.

42
FEEDLOT STEERS BULLS
  • Bulls gain more rapidly and more efficiently than
    steers.
  • Bulls produce leaner carcasses that are more
    variable in tenderness than steer carcasses.
  • Bulls are more difficult to manage than steers or
    heifers.
  • There is only a limited market for bull beef.

43
AGE OF FEEDLOT CATTLE
  • Yearlings gain 10 to 20 faster than calves
    depending on weight and condition.
  • Yearlings consume 10 to 40 more feed than
    calves.
  • Yearlings are less efficient in converting feed
    to gain than calves.
  • Yearlings require fewer days in the feedlot to
    reach final weight and carcass grade.
  • Western U.S. feedlots prefer to feed yearlings.

44
BREED EFFECTS
  • Larger continental breeds gain faster than
    British breeds, but must be carried to heavier
    weights to grade choice.
  • There is little difference in feed efficiency
    when fed to the same carcass endpoint.
  • Holsteins require about 10 more feed per lb. of
    gain than beef breeds but ADG is similar to beef
    breeds.

45
EFFECT OF BODY CONDITION
  • When placed on comparable diets, thin cattle gain
    faster and more efficiently than fatter cattle.
  • This phenomenon is called compensatory gain.
  • Cattle feeders try to avoid buying fat feeder
    cattle unless they are priced somewhat lower per
    cwt. than thin feeder cattle.

46
FEEDLOT PROFIT OR LOSS
  • Dekalb feedlots average profit per head over a 23
    year period was 26.
  • Profitability is influenced by changes in the
    grain and cattle markets.
  • Risk can be controlled by use of contracts and
    trading for future market access.
  • Marketing skills are critical for success.

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