Abstract

Abstract The beef calf weaning period is a time of transition in the cow-calf production cycle and can be one of the most stressful stages in the life of a beef calf. This transition can have a major impact on both calf short- and long-term health, growth performance and economic returns. There are several different weaning management strategies cattle producers can use in this transition period. The objective of this study was to assess the effects of weaning management practices on beef calf performance and health before backgrounding. A two-year study was conducted using 427 steer calves (216 year 1, average BW 297 kg; 213 year 2, average BW 291 kg) from three Auburn University research farms were randomly assigned based on weaning weight to one of three different weaning method groups for a 14-day observation period: fenceline, nose-flap, or abrupt weaning. On day 0, all calves assigned to the abrupt weaning group traveled 3 hours to one central location. Calves in the fenceline and nose-flap groups traveled to the same location on day 14 of study. Calves were weighed on day 0, day 14 and 24 hours following any travel event. Blood samples were also collected to determine haptoglobin concentrations surrounding the travels events and blood titers following vaccinations. In both years of the study, fenceline weaned calves had the greatest average daily gain at 1.08 kg/d (P < 0.0001) and abruptly weaned calves had the least average daily gain, losing 0.15 kg/d during the 14-d observation period. In Year 1, steers had a significantly greater (P < 0.0001) gain across all treatments than calves in Year 2, with Year 1 calves gaining 7.72 kg more during the weaning period than Year 2 calves. Over both years of the study, fenceline weaned calves gained more (P =0.0008) than both nose-flap and abruptly weaned calves. In Year, abruptly weaned calves had greater blood concentrations of haptoglobin (0.084mg/mL; P < 0.0001) than both the fenceline and noseflap weaned calves (0.023mg/mL; 0.020mg/mL). This data demonstrates how weaning management strategies may influence calf growth performance and the transition into the post-weaning period.

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