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Rapid-gain feeding boosts beef-on-dairy calf growth but increases backfat

Created at 5 Jun · 11:14 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A study on beef-on-dairy calves found that rapid-gain feeding programs (4.2 lb/day) accelerated growth and improved marbling compared to moderate-gain programs (2.6 lb/day). However, this faster growth came with increased backfat thickness and reduced estimated retail meat yield.

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Key Numbers

4.2 lb./daytarget gain for rapid-gain program
2.6 lb./daytarget gain for moderate-gain program
449 lb.average starting weight of calves
813 lb.transition weight for growing diets
1,667 lb.average market weight for steers
1,550 lb.average market weight for heifers
90 daystime to reach transition weight on rapid-gain program
105 daystime to reach transition weight on moderate-gain program
3.4%faster overall growth to market weight with rapid-gain
5 to 7 weeksadditional time for Holstein steers to reach market weight
19 lb.heavier hot carcass weight for beef-Holstein crosses
1%higher dressing percentage for beef-Holstein crosses

Who's Involved

Erika Cornand
PhD student at the University of Saskatchewan leading the research
Alberta Milk
Provided funding for the research
SaskMilk
Provided funding for the research
Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture
Provided funding for the research
Canadian Beef Grading Agency
Uses carcass yield class grids that may be affected by backfat

↳ Why This Matters

The study highlights a trade-off in feeding strategies for beef-on-dairy calves, where faster growth and better marbling come at the cost of increased backfat and reduced retail meat yield, impacting profitability and grading outcomes.

Key facts

  • Rapid-gain feeding programs for beef-on-dairy calves resulted in faster growth and higher marbling scores.
  • Beef-Holstein cross calves reached market weight sooner and had heavier carcasses than Holstein steers.
  • The rapid-gain program increased backfat thickness and reduced estimated retail meat yield.
  • Dairy-origin calves are transitioned to high-energy diets sooner than traditional beef calves.
  • Research compared moderate-gain (2.6 lb/day) and rapid-gain (4.2 lb/day) grower programs.

The number of beef-on-dairy calves in Canadian feedlots is increasing as dairy producers seek to add value to surplus calves. A recent study evaluated the impact of rapid-gain (target 4.2 lb/day) versus moderate-gain (target 2.6 lb/day) growing programs on Holstein steers, beef-Holstein cross steers, and beef-Holstein cross heifers. Calves started at approximately 449 lb. and were fed until they reached about 813 lb. before transitioning to a common finishing diet. The rapid-gain program resulted in calves reaching transition weight in 90 days compared to 105 days for the moderate-gain program. Overall, cattle on the rapid-gain program grew 3.4% faster to market weight. Beef-Holstein crosses outperformed straightbred Holstein steers, reaching market weight 5-7 weeks sooner with heavier hot carcass weights and higher dressing percentages. The rapid-gain program also led to higher marbling scores but increased backfat thickness and reduced estimated retail meat yield. These outcomes have practical implications for carcass yield class under grading systems.

Frequently asked questions

Dairy-origin calves typically enter the growing phase earlier and are transitioned to high-energy diets sooner than traditional beef calves, which remain with the cow on pasture for longer periods.

The rapid-gain program led to faster growth, reduced time to market, better gain-to-feed ratios, and higher marbling scores, but also increased backfat and reduced estimated retail meat yield.

Beef-Holstein crosses reached market weight sooner, had heavier hot carcass weights, higher dressing percentages, and larger ribeye areas compared to Holstein steers.

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How It Developed

5 Jun · 8:25 PM
Research evaluated moderate- and rapid-gain grower programs for beef-on-dairy calves, finding rapid gain beneficial but requiring attention to backfat.
The Western Producer via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Rapid-gain feeding wins for beef-on-dairy calves — but watch the backfatm.piqsuite.com

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