CQUniversity
Browse

Responses to various protein and energy supplements by steers fed low-quality tropical hay. 2. Effect of stage of maturity of steers

journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-30, 03:50 authored by SR McLennan, JM Campbell, CH Pham, KA Chandra, Simon QuigleySimon Quigley, DP Poppi
Dose response curves to various supplements were established in two pen-feeding experiments (Exp1 and Exp2) with Bos indicus crossbred steers of two age groups (Young, 10-12 months; Old, 33-36 months) fed low-quality tropical grass hays ad libitum. Diets included supplements based on (Exp1) cottonseed meal (CSM; intake (as fed) 0-10 g/kg liveweight (W).day) and a barley mix (Bar; 0-20 g/kg W.day) and (Exp2) a molasses mix (MUP) and a Bar mix, both fed at 0-20 g/kg W.day. Urea was provided with the Bar mixes and urea/copra meal with the MUP mix. Growth rates of Young steers increased linearly with Bar and MUP supplements but asymptotically with CSM whereas those of Old steers increased asymptotically with all supplement types. With supplement intake expressed on a liveweight basis (g/kg W.day), responses were greater for both steer age groups with CSM compared with Bar (Young, P < 0.001; Old, P < 0.01) and Bar compared with MUP treatments (Young, P < 0.01; Old, P < 0.05). Furthermore, Old steers outperformed their Young counterparts with both CSM (P < 0.05) and Bar (P < 0.001) supplements fed in Exp1 and with Bar and MUP supplements (P < 0.01) fed in Exp2. When supplement intake was expressed in absolute terms (kg/day), growth responses were not different between age groups for different supplements except that Old steers had a higher daily W gain on Bar than their Young counterparts (P < 0.05). Intake of hay (W-corrected) was higher for Young compared with Old steers without supplement but was variably reduced for both steer groups with increasing supplement intake. The results of these experiments have implications for supplement formulation for steers at different stages of maturity grazing low-quality forages.

History

Volume

57

Issue

3

Start Page

489

End Page

504

Number of Pages

16

eISSN

1836-5787

ISSN

1836-0939

Publisher

CSIRO

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2015-11-24

External Author Affiliations

Department of Agriculture and Fisheries; University of Queensland

Author Research Institute

  • Institute for Future Farming Systems

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Animal Production Science

Usage metrics

    CQUniversity

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC