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Winter weighing - an essential in calf to beef production

Winter weighing - an essential in calf to beef production

Achieving daily live weight gain targets throughout an animal’s life on calf to beef farms is one of the key metrics used to measure the success of animal nutrition, grassland management, husbandry and health programmes.

As part of the DairyBeef 500 Campaign, the participating farmers are monitoring animal performance through weighing at key times throughout the year.

Regardless of the system being operated, the ability to achieve the desired levels of animal performance is a common trend witnessed on many of the top performing dairy-beef operations nationally.

Where weight gain targets – highlighted in the below table – are not achieved, additional costs may occur due to a longer finishing period, the production of lighter carcasses and/or an older age of slaughter; all three are potential negatives when the heightened level of farm input costs witnessed over the past 12 months are taken into account.

Depending on farm location, the winter housing period for 2022-born animals has already begun on some farms, while it is just around the corner for others. With the return of animals to the farmyard for housing, there is an excellent opportunity to assess how animals have performed this year on your farm by completing a housing weighing.

Developed over numerous years of research, Teagasc’s blueprints for dairy-beef production provide details on the key weight gain targets to be achieved at farm level to make the various strands of dairy-beef production a success.

Table 1: Live weight targets for spring-born animals up until turnout of the second year

Early-maturing system targets
  19-month heifer

23-month steer

Stage of production Liveweight (kg) Average Daily Gain (kg/day) Liveweight (kg) Average Daily Gain (kg/day)
Weaned calf weight 90 0.70 90 0.70
Housing (1st winter) 200 0.70 230 0.85
Turnout 260 0.50 310 0.60
Holstein Friesian system targets
  21-month steer 24-month steer
Weaned calf weight 90 0.70 90 0.70
Housing (1st winter) 240 0.80 230 0.70
Turnout 320 0.70 310 0.60
Continental systems
  21-month heifer 24-month steer
Weaned calf weight 90 0.70 90 0.70
Housing (1st winter) 240 0.80 240 0.80
Turnout 310 0.60 330 0.70

Impact of underperformance

When farms fail to meet the performance targets up until housing, there’s the risk of the system being penalised in terms of the potential returns achieved from the market either through higher input costs or reduced carcass weights.

Taking a Holstein Friesian steer, slaughtered at 24 months, as an example, an under performance of 0.1kg/head/day from the day the calf arrives on farm up until housing could result in the loss of up to 27kg of liveweight.

If this weight gain loss is not recovered between housing and the start of the finishing period next year, it could result in an additional 27 days of feeing during the indoor period to achieve the desired carcass output of 320kg/animal. This represents an additional concentrate and silage input cost of approximately €82/head when concentrates and silage are valued at €410/t and 20c/kg of DM, respectively.  If the decision is made to slaughter at lighter carcass weights, it may represent a carcass sales loss of up to 13kg/animal marketed.

Where to from here?

Once the performance up until housing has been assessed, the next step is to understand the targets required over the first winter period on farm, which ranges from 0.5kg/head/day up to 0.7kg/head/day, depending on the system being implemented.

Although these animals are capable of achieving a much higher level of daily gain over the winter months, a balancing act between animal performance and costs is required.

Research carried out in Teagasc Grange established that opting for moderate levels of animal performance was best to make use of compensatory growth – a period of accelerated growth next spring, once animals are turned out to high-quality grass offered on an ad-lib basis.

By availing of compensatory growth, there’s the potential to save in the region of 100kg of concentrates over the winter housing period when excellent quality silage is available. Where silage quality is poorer and additional hard feeding is required to achieve the daily weight gain target of 0.5-0.7kg/day, this concentrate requirement could easily double.

Critical to the success in achieving this target is balancing the quality of silage available to the concentrate being offered in terms of both quantity and quality offered. The starting point in this is completing a silage analysis.

An issue which occurs on many farms nationally is that weanlings fail to gain the minimum target for compensatory growth to occur over the winter months through under feeding, as the quality of silage in terms of dry matter digestibility (DMD) is over estimated or inadequate levels of meal feeding are supplied.

This means that once levels of average daily gain drop below 0.5kg/head/day and animals grow to slow over the winter months, its ability to make use of compensatory growth next spring is limited or reduced; thus leading to challenges in terms of meeting performance targets later in the system.

Along with ensuring that animals’ diets are balanced on the basis of silage quality over the winter months, a number of other factors must be considered to ensure the targeted levels of daily gain are achieved. These include: floor space; feed space; ventilation; access to clean and fresh water; and the implementation of appropriate heard health programmes.

This article first appear on Agriland as part of the winter beef series. For more information on the DairyBeef 500 Campaign, click here