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Dry Matter Intake Prediction of Steers and Heifers in the Feedlot: Effect of Initial Weight on Dry Matter Intake

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dc.creator Koknaroglu, Hayati
dc.creator Loy, D. D.
dc.creator Hoffman, M. P.
dc.date 2008-11-30T22:00:00Z
dc.date.accessioned 2020-10-06T10:14:09Z
dc.date.available 2020-10-06T10:14:09Z
dc.identifier 542fddd2-5828-46ac-b63a-6ed49b96f440
dc.identifier https://avesis.sdu.edu.tr/publication/details/542fddd2-5828-46ac-b63a-6ed49b96f440/oai
dc.identifier.uri http://acikerisim.sdu.edu.tr/xmlui/handle/123456789/60329
dc.description Close-out information, generated by the Iowa State University Feedlot Performance and Cost Monitoring Program submitted from January 1988 through December 1997 by Iowa cattle producers to Iowa State University, was examined to determine the effect of initial weight on dry matter intake (DMI) of steers and heifers in the feedlot. Close-out information consisting of 2445 pens of steers and 965 pens of heifers included information on start and end dates, cattle per pen, sex, housing type, days on feed, initial and sale weight, feed conversion (FC), proportion of concentrate, average daily gain (ADG), percent death loss, feed cost and total cost per 45.35 kg gain, breakeven sale price, non-feed variable cost, non-feed fixed cost and corn price. Daily DMI was not provided but was calculated as DMI = ADG x FC. Regression model included initial weight and, thus, DMI was regressed on initial weight for steers, heifers and combination of both. When the model was applied separately for steers, heifers and including both sexes, DMI prediction for steers was found as DMI 5.81 + 0.0125*Initial weight (n=2445, r(2)=0.41), whereas DMI prediction for heifers was found as DMI 5.03 + 0.0144*Initial weight (n=965, r(2)=0.38). When steers and heifers were combined, DMI prediction was found as DMI = 5.49 + 0.0133*Initial weight (n=3410, r(2)=0.43). These results are similar to those obtained by NRC (1996) where DMI = 4.54 + 0.0125*Initial weight. These prediction models predict average feed intake throughout a feeding period and implies that initial weight of cattle is related to average DMI during a feeding period. Slope for heifers was higher than that of steers, implying that heifers had a greater increase in DMI throughout a feeding period per unit of initial body weight.
dc.language eng
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.title Dry Matter Intake Prediction of Steers and Heifers in the Feedlot: Effect of Initial Weight on Dry Matter Intake
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/article


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