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PRODUCTION AND MANAGEMENT: Original Research| Volume 39, ISSUE 2, P69-78, April 2023

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Effects of extended days on feed on rate of change in performance and carcass characteristics of feedlot steers and heifers and Holstein steers

  • M.L. Galyean
    Correspondence
    Corresponding author.
    Affiliations
    Department of Veterinary Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock 79409
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  • W.T. Nichols
    Affiliations
    Merck Animal Health, Madison, NJ 07940
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  • M.N. Streeter
    Affiliations
    Merck Animal Health, Madison, NJ 07940
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  • Author Footnotes
    1 Three of the authors are employed by Merck Animal Health, the sponsor of the experiments summarized in this article. These authors provided background information and experimental details on the conduct of the studies included in the article but were not involved in the statistical analyses of the data, which was conducted by the first author. The first author has not declared any conflicts of interest.
    J.P. Hutcheson
    Footnotes
    1 Three of the authors are employed by Merck Animal Health, the sponsor of the experiments summarized in this article. These authors provided background information and experimental details on the conduct of the studies included in the article but were not involved in the statistical analyses of the data, which was conducted by the first author. The first author has not declared any conflicts of interest.
    Affiliations
    Merck Animal Health, Madison, NJ 07940
    Search for articles by this author
  • Author Footnotes
    1 Three of the authors are employed by Merck Animal Health, the sponsor of the experiments summarized in this article. These authors provided background information and experimental details on the conduct of the studies included in the article but were not involved in the statistical analyses of the data, which was conducted by the first author. The first author has not declared any conflicts of interest.
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      Abstract

      Objective

      We analyzed data from feedlot studies in which beef steers and heifers and Holstein steers were fed for extended days beyond the typical slaughter date with the objective of determining the rate of change in selected performance and carcass measurements over the extended feeding periods.

      Materials and Methods

      Performance and carcass measurements from 7 experiments with beef steers, 6 experiments with beef heifers, and 2 experiments with Holstein steers, representing a total of 687 pen observa- tions, were analyzed. Cattle were fed high-grain diets and managed under industry-standard conditions. All experi- ments included extended days on feed as a factor (0- to 62-d range for steers; 0- to 42-d range for heifers; and 0- to 56-d range for Holsteins), and several experiments included β-agonist and implant program comparisons. Key variables analyzed included DMI, ADG, final shrunk BW, hot carcass weight, and various measures of carcass fatness, yield, and quality. Mixed-model statistical meth- ods were used to evaluate β-agonist and implant programs and their interaction with extended days on feed, as well as the overall rate of change in performance and carcass measurements with extended days on feed, adjusting for random intercept effects of studies.

      Results and Discussion

      Feeding control diets versus zilpaterol (2 steer studies) or ractopamine diets (2 steer studies) resulted in effects consistent with the published literature. Interactions between extended days on feed and β-agonist or implant program treatments were noted for less than 5% of the variables examined. Similarly, for the overall analyses within class of cattle, interactions between extended days on feed and dietary or implant treatments were rare (2.5% of variables evaluated). Slope values in the overall analyses for all 3 classes of cattle were generally significant (P ≤ 0.03 for 85% of the variables analyzed), reflecting increased final shrunk BW and hot carcass weight, greater carcass fatness, and shifts toward higher QG and YG with extended days on feed.

      Implications and Applications

      Producers selling cattle on a carcass basis could use our slope data to es- timate changes in carcass weight with extended days on feed, as well as potential premiums and discounts that could be used in profit–loss projections.

      Key words