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Sire Effects on Carcass of Beef-Cross-Dairy Cattle: A Case Study in New Zealand

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Cattle born in the dairy industry are a very important source of beef. This study evaluated the carcasses of cattle born to dairy cows and sired by a range of Angus and Hereford sires. Sire affected most carcass traits of their progeny, particularly size and fat traits. The heaviest...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Martín, Natalia, Schreurs, Nicola, Morris, Stephen, López-Villalobos, Nicolás, McDade, Julie, Hickson, Rebecca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7997217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33673584
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11030636
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Cattle born in the dairy industry are a very important source of beef. This study evaluated the carcasses of cattle born to dairy cows and sired by a range of Angus and Hereford sires. Sire affected most carcass traits of their progeny, particularly size and fat traits. The heaviest sire had 46 kg greater carcass weight compared with the lightest sire, equivalent to NZ$266 greater value per progeny. Carcass fat traits (rib fat depth and marble scores) were the most variable among sires, indicating possibility of selection. Thus, using beef-breed sires chosen for greater carcass weight has the potential to increase the meat production of cattle born on dairy farms, while maintaining adequate fat levels and carcass quality to receive optimum payment. ABSTRACT: There is interest in increasing the carcass value of surplus calves born in the dairy industry that are reared for beef production in New Zealand. This experiment evaluated the carcass of Angus and Hereford sires via progeny testing of beef-cross-dairy offspring grown on hill country pasture. Weight and carcass traits were analyzed from 1015 animals and 1000 carcasses of 73 sires. The mean of the progeny group means was 567 kg for live weight at slaughter, 277 kg for carcass weight, 48.9% for dressing-out, 240.3 cm for carcass length, 73.6 cm(2) for eye muscle area, 7.4 mm for rib fat depth, 0.91 for marble score, 3.05 for fat color score, 3.01 for meat color score, and 5.62 for ultimate pH. Sire affected (p < 0.05) carcass size and fat traits, but not fat color, meat color, or ultimate pH (p > 0.05). There was a 46 kg increase in carcass weight between the best and worst sires tested. Carcass fat traits were the most variable among sires. The use of genetically superior beef-breed sires over dairy-breed cows has the potential to increase carcass weights from surplus calves born in the dairy industry, while maintaining adequate fat levels and carcass quality.