Abstract

ABSTRACT This study was conducted to evaluate the growth performance and carcass characteristics of finishing steers fed diets containing different feed additives: control (CTL; no feed additives); monensin [26 mg/kg dry matter (DM); MON]; a blend of cinnamaldehyde, eugenol, and capsicum (120 mg of a commercial product/kg DM; XT), or the combination of monensin and the blend of cinnamaldehyde, eugenol, and capsicum (26 mg/kg DM and 120 mg of a commercial product/kg DM, respectively; MON + XT). A total of 860 steers [initial body weight (BW) = 334 kg] were fed the basal diet (7% alfalfa hay and 93% concentrate; DM basis) containing the treatments during 154 days. Feed additives did not affect final BW, DM intake, average daily gain, and feed efficiency of finishing steers (P ≥ 0.12). Dressing percentage was lower for MON + XT than MON and XT (P = 0.01). Feeding XT tended to increase the percentage of the carcass with a small marbling score compared to MON (P = 0.09). The proportion of carcass grading premium choice tended to be greater for steers fed MON compared to XT (P = 0.07). The feed additives evaluated herein did not affect the growth performance of finishing beef steers and had little effects on carcass characteristics.

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