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New technology which will help beef producers and cattle feeders
identify breeding stock with the genetic potential to gain weight on less
feed, could save the Canadian beef industry hundreds of millions of
dollars per year, say researchers.
The technology, being used at bull test facilities at Olds College north
of Calgary as well as a private feedlot – Cattleland Feeders at Strathmore
east of Calgary – makes it possible to precisely measure the feed intake
of individual animals.
With that information, the beef industry will be able to identify breeding
animals with the genetic potential to be more feed efficient. As the
genetics of those animals are introduced into commercial herd breeding
programs on farms and ranches across the country, more animals entering
feedlots will have improved feed efficiency.
“The value of being able to identify cattle with superior feed efficiency
will have a tremendous impact on the beef industry,” says Dr. John
Basarab, an Alberta Agriculture Food and Rural Development beef research
scientist based in Lacombe.
“We estimate as the genetics of more feed efficient cattle spreads through
the industry over the next few years, cattle feeders will save more than
$100 million annually and there will be at least that much savings accrued
by cow/calf producers.”
The genetic potential for one animal to be more feed efficient over
another is a moderately heritable trait that can be passed from one
generation to the next. There’s good probability that both male and female
progeny or offspring of bulls showing high feed efficiency will also carry
that trait through their production cycles.
Feeding trials at Olds College over the past three years showed over a
120-day feeding period as much as an $80 per head feed savings for cattle
with the higher genetic potential for improved feed efficiency compared to
other cattle.
“Along the production chain that potentially means cow/calf producers will
see calves reach weaning weights either faster or on less feed,” says Neil
French, college instructor specializing in feedlot management and animal
breeding.
The concept of selecting cattle based on genetic potential for feed
efficiency isn’t new. Researchers first identified a genetic potential for
feed efficiency back in the
1960s, but little was done with that information. However, in the 1990s
Australian researchers began working with the concept, and in the early
2000s Canadian beef researchers took a serious look at this heritable
trait.
Basarab, working in a collaborative effort with a several researchers and
agencies over the past few years, developed the NFE process which was
tested at Olds College before being made available to commercial feedlots.
As feeding data is collected, other researchers such as Dr. Stephen Moore,
genomics chair at the University of Alberta, leads a program to identify
the genetic markers which one day will make it possible to rely on a blood
test to identify cattle with the greatest potential for improved feed
efficiency.
Along with being a tool for selecting more efficient cattle, the
technology also benefits the environment. Cattle eating less and making
more efficient use of rations helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Research at the University of Alberta, for example, shows improved feed
efficiency can reduce greenhouse gas emissions by nine to 15 percent.
Methane, in particular, can be reduced by up to 28 percent in more
efficient cattle.
The NFE research and demonstration work at Olds College is supported in
part by the beef sector of the Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Program for
Canadian Agriculture. The federal program, administered by the Canadian
Cattlemen’s Association, was designed to support dozens of projects across
the country that demonstrate practices that not only improve production
but also reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the agricultural industry.
For more details on the NFE project visit the CCA website at www.cattle.ca,
go to the Stewardship section and follow the links.
The new technology for measuring feed intake is a critical tool in
developing the whole concept of net feed efficiency, says Connie Burton,
an Olds College instructional assistant who has worked closely with French
during the three-year NFE project.
A key element making it possible to identify the most feed efficient
animals is sophisticated feeding technology developed by the Airdrie,
Alberta-based GrowSafe Systems. GrowSafe developed computerized bunk-style
feeders that can measure and record the feed intake of individual animals
each time they come to the bunk to eat. A sensor on the edge of the feeder
reads the electronic ear tag of each animal. The GrowSafe feeder weighs
the total amount of ration placed in the bunk and then records the amount
consumed during each visit by cattle.
Before this technology was introduced it was difficult and much more
expensive to accurately measure feed intake. Each animal had to be
monitored separately and it was much more labor intensive. Using the
GrowSafe system properly tagged cattle can be monitored in a commercial
feedlot setting.
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For more information contact:
Neil French, Instructor
Olds College,
Olds Alta.
Phone: (403) 556-4722
Pat Walker, Beef Project Coordinator
Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Program
High River, Alta.
Phone: (403) 601-8991
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