Effects of feeding corn silage from short-season hybrids and extending the backgrounding period on production performance and carcass traits of beef cattle

Citation

Chibisa, G.E., Beauchemin, K.A. (2018). Effects of feeding corn silage from short-season hybrids and extending the backgrounding period on production performance and carcass traits of beef cattle. Journal of Animal Science, [online] 96(6), 2490-2503. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/sky099

Plain language summary

Historically, corn silage has found limited use in backgrounding cattle diets in western Canada because of the shortage of heat units and moisture. However, in recent years, there has been a trend for increased temperatures during the growing season and growing season precipitation. Also, corn seed companies have developed short-season hybrids that mature in fewer days with high grain yield and optimum dry matter content for ensiling. The results has been a trend for increasing acreages of corn for silage where barley silage was previously was the main forage grown. Corn silage acreage in western Canada continues to expand with it being used increasingly in feedlot cattle diets. Our study evaluated the effects of increasing the amounts of corn silage in backgrounding diets on performance of cattle. Three approaches were used: 1) totally replacing barley silage with early-maturing corn silage, 2) increasing the proportion of corn silage in the diet, and 3) extending the duration of the backgrounding period. All cattle were finished on a standard diet. We concluded that including up to 90% of diet dry matter as corn silage and extending the backgrounding period had marginal effects on the performance of the cattle, when they were finished using a standard diet. Carcass traits were also not affected. We concluded that beef producers can make extensive use of early-maturing corn silage in growing cattle diets without compromising animal performance or carcass quality.

Abstract

Corn silage (CS) acreage in western Canada continues to expand with CS being used increasingly in feedlot cattle diets where barley silage (BS) previously was the main forage fed. Our study evaluated the effects of increasing the amounts of CS in backgrounding (BKGN) diets on performance of cattle by 1) replacing BS with early-maturing CS, 2) increasing the proportion of CS in the diet, and 3) extending the BKGN duration. A total of 160 steers (mean BW ± SD; 272 ± 22.4 kg) were used in a completely randomized design. Steers were assigned to 16 pens and fed BKGN diets (4 pens per diet) that contained 60% BS (DM basis; CON), 60% CS (60CS), 75% CS (75CS), or 90% CS (90CS) until reaching a mean pen BW of either 380 (SBKGN) or 430 ± 15 kg (LBKGN) with 2 pens per treatment. All steers were finished (FIN diet; 9% CS, 86% barley grain, and 5% supplement) to an equal-BW end point (700 ± 15 kg LW). During BKGN and FIN phases, DMI, ADG, and G:F were measured for all pens. Carcass data also were collected. No BKGN diet × duration interactions were statistically significant (P ≥ 0.412) for most production measures. As dietary CS content was increased during BKGN, DMI and ADG decreased (quadratic; P ≤ 0.003). There also was a tendency (P = 0.078) for a decrease in G:F at the highest level of CS. As expected, LBKGN steers took longer (105 vs. 71 d; P = 0.001) than SBKGN steers to reach the BKGN target end weight. In addition, as a result of their heavier weight at the beginning of FIN, LBKGN steers also had a higher DMI (11.6 vs. 11.0 kg/d; P = 0.045) than SBKGN steers. However, no carryover effects (P ≥ 0.354) of BKGN diet on DMI, ADG, and G:F were significant during the FIN phase. Similarly, the BKGN diet and duration had no effect (P ≥ 0.219) on carcass traits including HCW, dressing percentage, and quality grade. However, we detected an interaction between BKGN diet and duration on backfat thickness (P = 0.009); SBKGN steers that were fed 75CS during BKGN accumulated more backfat during FIN than LBKGN steers that were fed 75CS during BKGN, and because they were lighter at the beginning of FIN they took longer to reach 700 kg BW, their end point. In conclusion, dietary inclusion of CS (up to 90% of diet DM) in place of BS and extending the BKGN period had marginal effects on FIN performance or carcass traits in our study. Therefore, beef producers can make extensive use of early-maturing CS in growing cattle diets without compromising animal performance or carcass quality.

Publication date

2018-06-01

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