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Replacement Heifers - Press Release, 2001
News release
issued March 12, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Replacement Heifer Management
ARDMORE -- Livestock producers in
southern Oklahoma and north central Texas might be considering the idea of retaining
and developing replacement heifers this year. In light of the current position
in the cattle cycle and the current and potential value of quality replacement
females, this decision may be logical, according to Billy Cook, a Noble Foundation
livestock specialist.
"There are several factors to consider
to ensure that this venture is successful," Cook said. "An effective replacement
heifer development program requires more time, labor, and feed resources than
does the mature cow herd. However, if managed efficiently, heifer development
can be cost effective, profitable, and relatively simple."
The goal for a heifer development
program should be to get the largest number of heifers bred in the shortest
time and, ultimately, to get a high percentage of these first-calf heifers bred
back for their second calf.
Yearling replacement heifers must
reach puberty before the actual breeding season. Research has repeatedly shown
that neither age nor actual body weight alone is a reliable predictor of reproductive
ability: threshold values are a more effective indicator. Body weight relative
to mature weight can effectively indicate puberty or first estrus in heifers.
"If 90 percent of a group of heifers
are expected to be in heat during the breeding season, they should weigh a minimum
of 65 percent of their expected mature weight at the beginning of the breeding
season, which means the smallest heifer in the group, not the
average of the group, should weigh 65 percent of her expected mature size
at the start of the breeding season," Cook explained. "Research has shown that
the probability of breeding heifers that have reached or exceeded their minimum
target weights is 80 to 90 percent. However, the conception rate of heifers
lighter than their minimum target weight can be significantly lower.
"Many commercial ranchers underestimate
the mature size of their cow herd and consequently underestimate target weights
for the heifers," Cook added. "This mistake is very easy to make, so keep it
in mind as you are setting a target weight for your heifers."
Most heifers of most Bos taurus
breeds (such as Angus, Hereford and Shorthorn) are expected to reach puberty
by 12 to 14 months of age. Bos indicus and Bos indicus influenced
(Brahman, Beefmaster, Brangus etc.) heifers typically reach puberty at 14 to
17 months of age.
"Once again, these are thresholds,
not absolutes," Cook said. "The actual minimum target weight for yearling heifers
at the beginning of the breeding season differs widely among and within breeds
and crossbreeding combinations. Within a breed or crossbreeding combination,
there are very large differences in mature cow size from herd to herd because
of herd differences in nutrient availability and genetic selection for growth.
However, in nearly all cases the minimum target weight can be expressed as 65
percent of the anticipated mature weight. To maximize the conception rate of
heifers, we should use a combination of age thresholds and 65 percent of mature
weight."
Yearling heifers should be bred to
start calving 15 to 30 days ahead of the mature cow herd and for no more than
a 60-day calving season. Calving first-calf, two-year-old heifers early in the
calving season gives them more time to recover from calving and ultimately a
better chance of breeding back for their second calf.
"Keep in mind that the most nutritionally
demanding time in a cow's lifetime is the first 30 to 120 days after she calves
as a two-year-old, at which time there are several nutritional stresses, including
lactation demands, continued growth, and tooth loss," Cook explained. "On top
of that, we are expecting these heifers to cycle and rebreed 60 to 90 days after
calving. Therefore, these heifers must consume a diet that meets or exceeds
their nutritional requirements.
"Remember that the actual pounds
of protein and energy required for heifers and cows are about the same, but
physiologically a heifer can't consume as much feed as a cow; therefore, virgin
and first-calf heifers require a diet that is higher in crude protein (CP) and
total digestible nutrients (TDN) on a percentage basis," he added.
How fast should heifers gain weight?
Researchers at Kansas State University found that the reproductive performance
of heifers that gained 0.55 pound per day until two months before breeding and
then were grown at 2.5 pounds per day was equal to that of heifers grown at
1.31 pounds per day from November to May. Oklahoma State University workers
have shown that heifers wintered at 0.6 pound of gain per day and then fed a
complete ration that resulted in 1.9 pounds of gain per day reached puberty
20 to 30 days sooner than their counterparts that were fed to gain at more uniform
rates.
"This information is particularly
applicable this year because of the very restricted growth of winter pasture
in most of the region," Cook said. "It also reinforces the potential for accelerated
heifer growth on spring small-grain pasture. Providing heifers with access to
small-grain pasture for graze-out would allow them to graze high-quality pasture
at an accelerated rate of gain until breeding."
The advantage to using an inonophore
in the diet of growing heifers should also be considered. The feed additives
monensin (Rumensin) and lasalocid (Bovatec) are ionophores approved for growing
heifers. Research has shown that using either of these compounds in the diet
of replacement heifers can increase daily gains by 0.10 to 0.20 pound per day
and shorten the time to first estrus by 1 to 2 weeks.
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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural,
forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous
non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers
and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, check out the Noble
Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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