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Effects of breed type and growing program on performance and carcass characteristics of early weaned calvesFranke, Jake Andrew 15 May 2009 (has links)
A 2-yr study using Mashona- (M, yr 1 and 2) and Tuli-sired (T, yr 2) cows produced from a three-breed diallele cow base comprised of Brahman (BB), Romosinuano (RR), and Angus (AA) was conducted to determine effects of breed type and growing strategies on growth performance and carcass characteristics in early-weaned calves. Steers and heifers used were between 90 and 200 d old at arrival. Cattle were randomly split into one of two nutritional treatment groups with sex, breed type, and age stratified across treatments. Calves were either fed a roughage diet (P) or placed immediately on a concentrate grower diet (F) for approximately x d, then finished together in the feedlot. In both years, F calves gained more (P < .01) than P calves during the growing stage. In yr 1, P calves gained more (P < .05) than F calves during the middle, late and overall finishing period. For yr 2, F calves gained more (P < .05) during the early finishing phase, but P cattle gained more (P < .05) during the middle portion. In yr 1, P calves had higher (P < .05) USDA marbling scores than F calves. Growing program had no effect on carcass characteristics during yr 2. In yr 1, MAA calves gained more (P < .05) during the overall finishing period. TAA calves gained more (P < .01) during the growing stage and TBB calves gained more (P < .05) for the overall finishing period in yr 2. In yr 1, MAA and MBB were fatter (P < .05), and MAA and MAR calves deposited more (P < .01) marbling than others. MAA calves also had less (P < .05) desirable yield grades than other cattle. In yr 2, TAA calves had more (P < .05) marbling than other calves, followed by TRR cattle that deposited more (P < .05) than remaining calves.
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Effects of breed type and growing program on performance and carcass characteristics of early weaned calvesFranke, Jake Andrew 15 May 2009 (has links)
A 2-yr study using Mashona- (M, yr 1 and 2) and Tuli-sired (T, yr 2) cows produced from a three-breed diallele cow base comprised of Brahman (BB), Romosinuano (RR), and Angus (AA) was conducted to determine effects of breed type and growing strategies on growth performance and carcass characteristics in early-weaned calves. Steers and heifers used were between 90 and 200 d old at arrival. Cattle were randomly split into one of two nutritional treatment groups with sex, breed type, and age stratified across treatments. Calves were either fed a roughage diet (P) or placed immediately on a concentrate grower diet (F) for approximately x d, then finished together in the feedlot. In both years, F calves gained more (P < .01) than P calves during the growing stage. In yr 1, P calves gained more (P < .05) than F calves during the middle, late and overall finishing period. For yr 2, F calves gained more (P < .05) during the early finishing phase, but P cattle gained more (P < .05) during the middle portion. In yr 1, P calves had higher (P < .05) USDA marbling scores than F calves. Growing program had no effect on carcass characteristics during yr 2. In yr 1, MAA calves gained more (P < .05) during the overall finishing period. TAA calves gained more (P < .01) during the growing stage and TBB calves gained more (P < .05) for the overall finishing period in yr 2. In yr 1, MAA and MBB were fatter (P < .05), and MAA and MAR calves deposited more (P < .01) marbling than others. MAA calves also had less (P < .05) desirable yield grades than other cattle. In yr 2, TAA calves had more (P < .05) marbling than other calves, followed by TRR cattle that deposited more (P < .05) than remaining calves.
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Effects of Chicken Egg Anti-F4 Antibodies and a Combination of Chitosan and Probiotic Supplementation on Performance and Diarrhea Incidences in Enterotoxigenic Escherichia Coli K88+ challenged PigletsAluko, Kolawole 25 September 2015 (has links)
Post-weaning diarrhea is a major health challenge in the swine industry and is routinely managed by fortifying pig starter diets with antimicrobials. But there are concerns about antibiotic resistance, hence the need for identifying effective alternatives. The use of spray-dried whole egg powder containing anti-F4 antibodies (SDWE) against recombinant F4 antigens and chitosan oligosaccharide and Enterococcus fecalis probiotic combination (CPRO) was investigated in two trials using enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli K88+ (ETEC) oral challenge model in 21-d-old piglets. Pre-challenge, SDWE supported higher (P < 0.05) piglet performance whereas during the post-challenge period, SDWE and CPRO had no effect on growth performance but diarrhea incidences and severity were reduced (P > 0.05) in SDWE-fed piglets compared to the control. The results show that SDWE supported greater piglet performance pre-ETEC challenge although there was no benefit of SDWE or CPRO supplementation evident during the post-challenge period in early-weaned pigs. / October 2015
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