Abstract
One hundred sixty spring-calving Hereford x Angus cows grazing low-quality, tallgrass-prairie range during the winter of 2000-2001 were supplemented before calving either daily or three times weekly. The supplement contained 40% CP with 0, 15, 30, or 45% of the supplemental degradable intake protein from urea. Supplement was fed at 4 lbs/head daily to cows receiving supplement daily. Cows receiving supplement three times weekly were fed the same amount of weekly supplement, but split equally among their supplementation events. After calving, all cows received a supplement without urea on a daily basis. In general, prepartum supplements that contained more urea prompted greater body weight loss; however, the effect of increasing urea was most noticeable when supplements were fed only three times weekly. When averaged across supplementation frequencies, increasing the level of supplemental urea tended (P=0.15) to decrease pregnancy rate in beef cows that had received urea supplementation before calving.
Highlights
Winter supplementation strategies often use daily feeding of true protein supplements
One hundred sixty spring-calving Hereford x Angus cows grazing low-quality, tallgrass-prairie range during the winter of 2000-2001 were supplemented before calving either daily or three times weekly
Cows receiving supplement three times weekly were fed the same amount of weekly supplement, but split among their supplementation events
Summary
Winter supplementation strategies often use daily feeding of true protein supplements. Previous research at Kansas State University indicated that reducing true protein supplementation frequency from daily to three times weekly resulted in minimal performance differences of beef cows. In the context of a 30% CP supplement, when up to 45% of that supplement’s degradable intake protein was supplied as urea, the magnitude of body condition loss over a winter supplementation period was minimal, compared with true protein supplementation. It is unknown whether decreasing the feeding frequency of supplements that contain appreciable urea will significantly harm cattle performance. Our objective was to evaluate the effects of two frequencies of prepartum supplementation with high-protein supplements that delivered four levels of supplemental urea on performance of springcalving beef cows grazing winter pasture
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