Abstract

Simple SummaryCattle mobility is an important animal welfare outcome measured by beef producers and meat processors. Factors that negatively impact fed cattle mobility include high environmental temperatures, heavy body weights, handling practices during loading and unloading, and longer transport times. As the United States cattle industry recovered from closures and/or reduced capacity at slaughter plants that occurred as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was concern that cattle mobility challenges would intensify due to the increased prevalence of some of the previously identified risk factors, particularly as summer months approached. The aim of this study was to characterize cattle mobility during the COVID-19 pandemic recovery period at a slaughter facility located in the Central Plains United States. Although mobility challenges increased at the study facility from July through October 2020 as compared with historical benchmarking databases, the prevalence of cattle with significant impairment did not increase and remained low. Mobility scores were impacted by average weight, temperature humidity index, distance hauled, sex, and days on feed. Although mobility challenges increased during this time period, collaborative efforts across the supply chain were effective at managing mobility conditions important to cattle welfare during the marketing and slaughter process.The COVID-19 pandemic had significant consequences on cattle slaughter capacity in the United States. Although industry stakeholders implemented strategies to minimize cattle welfare impacts of increased weights, days on feed (DOF), and increasing temperatures, there were concerns that mobility challenges would be observed at slaughter facilities. The objectives of this study were to characterize mobility in fed cattle during this recovery period and to identify factors impacting mobility. A total of 158 groups of cattle (15,388 animals) from one slaughter facility were included in the study. A 4-point mobility scoring system was used to assess cattle mobility. Cattle at the facility with normal mobility scores were reduced from the historical average of 96.19% to 74.55%. No increase in highly elevated mobility scores was observed. Mobility was impacted by weight, temperature humidity index (THI), distance hauled, sex, and DOF, with results differing by mobility category. Weather was a key contributor to mobility challenges; the relative risk of observing an elevated mobility score was 45.76% greater when the THI changed from No Stress to Mild Stress. Despite the challenges that the industry faced during this period, efforts to minimize negative effects on cattle welfare by enhanced focus on low-stress handling were effective.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization on 11 March 2020 [1]

  • As the cattle industry recovered from closures and/or reduced capacity at slaughter plants that occurred as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was concern that processors would see an increase in cattle mobility challenges due to the increased prevalence of some of the previously identified risk factors

  • Many factors may have contributed to the multifactorial nature of cattle mobility, this study identified weight, days on feed (DOF), temperature humidity index (THI), sex class, and distance traveled to the plant as factors affecting mobility and many of these were impacted by the repercussions of the pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization on 11 March 2020 [1]. By late March 2020, meat processing plants in the United States began to shut down or reduce capacity in order to control the number of COVID-19 infections among processing plant workers. Throughout April, May, and June, processing plants intermittently closed or slowed production in order to control COVID-19 outbreaks [2]. Beef processing plants were impacted during this time. For the 8 weeks following 5 April 2020, cattle slaughter averaged 22% lower than the same time period in 2019 [4]; the total number of cattle slaughtered in the United States in May 2020 was 23 percent less than the same time the previous year [5]. Cattle slaughter numbers were drastically impacted, with estimates ranging from 25% to 40% loss in production capacity and slaughter numbers for beef cattle nationally [3,4,6,7]

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