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Research Project: IMPROVING DAIRY FORAGE AND MANURE MANAGEMENT TO REDUCE ENVIRONMENTAL RISK

Location: Dairy Forage and Aquaculture Research

Title: Post Weaning Performance of Spring-Born Calves Weaned from Tall Fescue Pastures with a Wild-Type Endophyte or a Non-Toxic Novel Endophyte

Authors
item Coffey, K - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS
item Caldwell, W - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS
item Coblentz, Wayne
item Hess, T - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS
item Hubbell, Iii, D - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS
item Ogden, R - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS
item Akins, M - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS
item Looper, Michael
item Rosenkrans, Jr, C - UNIV. OF ARKANSAS

Submitted to: Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series
Publication Type: Experiment Station
Publication Acceptance Date: August 15, 2008
Publication Date: December 1, 2008
Repository URL: http://arkansasagnews.uark.edu/563-10.pdf
Citation: Coffey, K.P., Caldwell, W.K., Coblentz, W.K., Hess, T.W., Hubbell, Iii, D.S., Ogden, R.K., Akins, M.A., Looper, M.L., Rosenkrans, Jr, C.F. 2008. Post Weaning Performance of Spring-Born Calves Weaned from Tall Fescue Pastures with a Wild-Type Endophyte or a Non-Toxic Novel Endophyte. Research Series 563. Arkansas Animal Science Department Report 2008. (11):37-39.

Technical Abstract: Numerous studies have reported compensatory gain by yearling cattle that grazed toxic endophyte-infected ‘KY-31’ tall fescue (E+), but few studies have reported post-weaning performance by calves weaned from E+. Our objective was to compare post-weaning performance by spring-born calves grazing E+ with that of calves grazing a non-toxic endophyte-tall fescue association developed at the Univ. of Arkansas (NE+). Gelbvieh × Angus crossbred cows (n=134; 1,078 lb initial BW) were allocated to one of four 25-acre pastures in 2005 and to one of eight 25-acre pastures in 2006. Cows began grazing during the fall of each year. Calves were born and remained on their assigned pastures until weaning in 2006, but were removed from NE+ in the summer of 2005 because of low forage availability. After weaning, calves grazed bermudagrass pastures followed by winter annuals. Steers weaned from NE+ were heavier (P < 0.01) at weaning and throughout the post-weaning period, and produced heavier hot carcasses (57 lb; P < 0.05) than steers weaned from E+. Heifers weaned from NE+ tended (P < 0.10) to be heavier at weaning (39 lb). Heifer weight at breeding was only 22 lb heavier (P = 0.33) from NE+ vs. E+, but calving rates by heifers weaned from NE+ were much greater (P < 0.01) than those by heifers weaned from E+. Daily gains during post-weaning did not differ (P ' 0.33) between NE+ and E+ for steers or heifers. Therefore, grazing spring-born nursing calves on E+ prior to weaning has negative impacts that were not compensated for during later production stages on non-toxic feedstuffs.

   

 
Project Team
Jokela, William - Bill
Coblentz, Wayne
Vadas, Peter
Powell, J Mark
Russelle, Michael
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Food Animal Production (101)
  Manure and Byproduct Utilization (206)
  Pasture, Forage and Rangeland Systems (215)
 
 
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