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RESEARCH
Science
Agriculture
CATTLE
Earlier weaning, high-energy diet produce higher quality
beef
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
8/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Cattle weaned early and put immediately on high-energy
finishing diets produce more high-quality beef with less waste fat than
traditionally later-weaned-and-finished cattle, according to a series
of research projects at the University of Illinois.
The findings challenge long-held beliefs about the weaning-feeding process
and fit nicely into a rapidly expanding value-based marketing approach
in which meat quality rather than average cattle weight drives the payments
made to producers. Producers for years have weaned their animals at
seven months and let them forage in pastures for up to a year before
feeding a corn-based finishing diet.
The researchers' latest study, published in the July issue of the Journal
of Animal Science, documents changes in meat-fat composition over two
production seasons using the two approaches. It also confirms their
preliminary findings about the possible advantages of early weaning
of cattle.
"This study shows that we can produce high-quality beef that consumers
desire, while at the same time reducing the amount of waste fat that
must be discarded," said Larry L. Berger, a professor of animal
sciences. "Our approach gives farmers an alternative production
system in which they can improve the quality of the meat and get a better
economic return off the animals."
Bergers team analyzed two groups of Angus-Simmenthal heifers from
the same genetic line. One group (16 animals) was weaned and put to
pasture in the traditional way before getting the finishing diet. Thirty-two
animals born the next year were weaned early and put on the finishing
diet.
Ultrasound readings taken at regular intervals let researchers see changes
in both intramuscular fat and subcutaneous rib fat. Intramuscular fat,
or marbling, is a barometer of beef juiciness and flavor. Subcutaneous
fat is waste and is removed before meat cuts hit store shelves.
Marbling increased in the younger animals at a higher rate, and the
layer of undesirable rib fat was smaller, Berger said. All animals were
harvested at about the same time. For the early weaned animals, harvest
came at age 13 months, which is about five months earlier than is traditionally
done.
"The older traditionally fed animals had more of the calories they
consumed go into trimmed fat," he said. "The younger ones
had more calories go in the marbling. The early weaning group had more
of the nutrients consumed in the finished product compared to the older
ones."
The National Beef Quality Audit in the 1990s concluded that cattle producers
should strive to adapt to consumer demand for more lean beef by reducing
rib fat by 20 percent and increasing marbling. Weaning animals early,
Berger said, may help producers achieve that goal and reduce their feed
costs.
The new study was written by Berger and department colleagues Aimee
E. Wertz, a doctoral student, and professors Dan B. Faulkner, Floyd
K. McKeith and Sandra Luisa Rodriguez-Zas. The Illinois Council for
Food and Agriculture Research funded the research.
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