At weaning in the fall, crossbred heifers (n = 224), born in either the winter (January-February) or spring (March-April), were assigned on the basis of age, sirebreed and body weight to one of two similar winter housing facilities (with or without sterilized bulls), and to one of two forage-based (87%) diets (with or without lasalocid, 200 mg d-1) within each housing facility. Observations for estrus were made twice daily. Timed AI (66 h after PGF2α) was used to breed heifers for the first time at 14 mo of age. Plasma progesterone concentrations were used to confirm estrus/ovulation and to determine the PGF2α response rate. Bull exposure advanced puberty in winter-born heifers, but delayed puberty in spring-born heifers (P ± 0.029). Similarly, timed AI pregnancy for winter-bom heifers was higher with than without bull exposure (58.9 vs. 32.5 ± 5.3%; P = 0.017) while the opposite occurred for the spring-born group (27.1 vs. 59.1 ± 4.7%; P < 0.001). Bull-exposed spring-born heifers were the oldest at calving, the latest to calve, and their calves had the slowest growth and lowest weaning weight means (P < 0.027). Lasalocid did not influence puberty (P ≥ 0.273), had a small effect on body weight gain (P ≥ 0.033) that did not limit attainment of optimal body weight or condition at AI, but enhanced response rate for spring-born heifers (P = 0.075) and conception rate for winter-born heifers (P = 0.047). The efficacy of bull exposure and lasalocid is dependent upon the proximity of heifers to the attainment of puberty when the treatments are introduced; further research is required to determine the most appropriate use of either management tool for developing beef replacement heifers.
CITATION STYLE
Small, J. A., Del Vecchio, R. P., McCaughey, W. R., Ward, D. R., & Sutherland, W. R. (2000). The effects of bull exposure and lasalocid on the development of replacement beef heifers. Canadian Journal of Animal Science, 80(4), 615–624. https://doi.org/10.4141/A99-127
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