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Feedlot growth performance and carcass characteristics of steers backgrounded on buffel grass or buffel-Desmanthus mixed pastures

Feedlot performance and carcass characteristics of tropical beef steers backgrounded on buffel grass ( ) only or buffel grass oversown with desmanthus ( spp. ; 11.5% initial sward botanical composition) were evaluated. It was hypothesized that tropical beef cattle steers backgrounded on buffel grass...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Frontiers in veterinary science 2022-10, Vol.9, p.898325
Main Authors: Mwangi, Felista Waithira, Savage, Darryl, Gardiner, Christopher Peter, Charmley, Edward, Malau-Aduli, Bunmi Sherifat, Kinobe, Robert Tumwesigye, Malau-Aduli, Aduli Enoch Othniel
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Language:English
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Summary:Feedlot performance and carcass characteristics of tropical beef steers backgrounded on buffel grass ( ) only or buffel grass oversown with desmanthus ( spp. ; 11.5% initial sward botanical composition) were evaluated. It was hypothesized that tropical beef cattle steers backgrounded on buffel grass only or buffel grass oversown with desmanthus with similar backgrounding growth performance will not differ in feedlot growth performance and carcass quality. Three hundred and twelve × tropical composite steers, 20-23 months old and weighing 413 ± 24 kg, previously backgrounded on buffel grass only or buffel-desmanthus mixed pastures for 147 days were finished on a concentrate diet in the feedlot for 110 days before slaughter. Buffel-desmanthus backgrounded steers had a slightly higher average daily gain (ADG; 1.8 kg/day) than the buffel grass backgrounded steers that had 1.7 kg/day ADG ( < 0.01). However, the final live weight and dry matter intake were not different ( ≥ 0.59). All the carcass traits measured were not different ( ≥ 0.18). Only 4% buffel grass and 8% buffel-desmanthus backgrounded steers fell short of the Meat Standards Australia (MSA) index, a level that is within the 4-9% reported for cattle produced in Queensland and slaughtered between July 2019 and June 2020. These findings indicate that desmanthus can be used to background beef cattle in northern Australia vertosol soil regions, where there is a paucity of adapted pasture legumes, with no negative impact on feedlot performance and carcass quality. The hypothesis that tropical beef cattle steers backgrounded on buffel grass only pastures or buffel grass oversown with desmanthus with similar backgrounding growth performance will have similar feedlot growth performance and carcass quality was accepted.
ISSN:2297-1769
2297-1769
DOI:10.3389/fvets.2022.898325