Effect of sward surface height on herbage intake and performance of finishing beef cattle

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Abstract

This study examined the effects of contrasting sward surface height (SSH) on the herbage intake, ingestive behaviour, and performance of steers grazing perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne)/white clover (Trifolium repens) pastures in New Zealand during summer, and the influence of this initial treatment contrast on subsequent cattle performance under common grazing conditions during early autumn. Twenty-four Angus-cross steers, 26 months old and with an initial liveweight of 522 ± 7.6 kg, were continuously stocked on swards maintained at SSH of 5 and 10 cm (L versus H) from 18 November 1996. Six steers from each treatment were slaughtered on 4 March and the remaining animals were grazed for another 5 weeks on common pastures until the final slaughter on 8 April 1997. Herbage intake (estimated by the n-alkane technique) and liveweight gain over the SSH contrast period, and carcass weight at first slaughter, were higher for steers grazed at 10 cm than for those grazed at 5 cm (7.5 ± 0.21 versus 5.0 ± 0.18 and 7.8 ± 0.38 versus 5.0 ± 0.33 kg DM d−1 from two intake estimates, P < 0.05 for each comparison; 1.10 ± 0.23 versus 0.32 ± 0.21 kg d−1, P < 0.01; and 332 ± 10.6 versus 287 ± 7.5 kg, P < 0.05, respectively). SSH did not affect carcass or meat quality characteristics. Liveweight and carcass weight gain per hectare were 71 % and 43% greater (318 versus 186 kg and 166 versus 116 kg over 105 days) for steers grazing at 10 cm despite the lower stocking rate (2.86 versus 5.80 steers ha−1) maintained by the tall swards. Significant differences in carcass weight were still evident at the end of the compensatory period between the steer groups originally on treatments H and L (335 ± 9.4 versus 297 ± 9.4 kg, P < 0.05). These results suggest that maintaining a sward height of 10 cm offers advantages in terms of individual animal output and output per hectare compared with grazing at 5 cm, and that compensatory growth does not seem to be an important phenomenon in heavy (over 500 kg liveweight) finishing steers. © 1999 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Realini, C. E., Hodgson, J., Morris, S. T., & Purchas, R. W. (1999). Effect of sward surface height on herbage intake and performance of finishing beef cattle. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 42(2), 155–164. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288233.1999.9513365

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