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Beef cattle

Breed of cattle


Breed of cattle

Beef cattle are cattle raised for meat production (as distinguished from dairy cattle, used for milk (production)). The meat of mature or almost mature cattle is mostly known as beef. In beef production there are three main stages: cow-calf operations, backgrounding, and feedlot operations. The production cycle of the animals starts at cow-calf operations; this operation is designed specifically to breed cows for their offspring. From here the calves are backgrounded for a feedlot. Animals grown specifically for the feedlot are known as feeder cattle, the goal of these animals is fattening. Animals not grown for a feedlot are typically female and are commonly known as replacement heifers. While the principal use of beef cattle is meat production, other uses include leather, and beef by-products used in candy, shampoo, cosmetics, and insulin.

Calving and breeding

Besides breeding to meet the demand for beef production, owners also use selective breeding to attain specific traits in their beef cattle. An example of a desired trait could be leaner meat or resistance to illness. Breeds known as dual-purpose are also used for beef production. These breeds have been selected for two purposes at once, such as both beef and dairy production, or both beef and draught. Dual-purpose breeds include many of the Zebu breeds of India such as Tharparkar and Ongole Cattle. There are multiple continental breeds that were bred for this purpose as well. The original Simmental/Fleckvieh from Switzerland is a prime example. Not only are they a dual-purpose breed for beef and dairy, but in the past they were also used for draught. However, throughout the generations, the breed has diverged into two groups through selective breeding.

Most beef cattle are mated naturally, whereby a bull is released into a herd of cows approximately 55 days after the calving period, depending on the cows' body condition score (BCS). If it was a cow's first time calving, she will take longer to re-breed by at least 10 days. However, beef cattle can also be bred through artificial insemination, depending on the cow and the size of the herd. Cattle are normally bred during the summer so that calving may occur the following spring. However, cattle breeding can occur at other times of year. Depending on the operation, calving may occur all year round. Owners can select the breeding time based on a number of factors, including reproductive performance, seasonal cattle pricing and handling facilities.

Cattle maintenance

Cattle handlers are expected to maintain a low-stress environment for their herds, involving constant safety, health, comfort, nourishment and humane handling. According to the Canadian National Farm Animal Care Council, beef cattle must have access to shelter from extreme weather, safe handling and equipment, veterinary care and humane slaughter. If an animal is infected or suspected to have an illness, it is the responsibility of the owners to report it immediately to a practicing veterinarian for either treatment or euthanasia. Depending on a multitude of factors (season, type of production system, stocking density, etc.), illness and disease can spread quickly through the herd from animal to animal. Owners are expected to monitor their cattle's condition regularly for early detection and treatment, as some cattle illnesses can threaten both cattle and human health (known as zoonotic) as witnessed with Mad cow disease and Tuberculosis.

On average, cattle will consume 1.4 to 4% of their body weight daily. There is a range of types of feed available for these animals. The standard text in the United States, Nutrient Requirements of Beef Cattle, has been through eight editions over at least 70 years ago. The 1996 seventh edition substituted the concept of metabolizable protein for the sixth edition's crude protein. In the 20th century, Canadian practice followed the American guidance. Already in 1970, the Food and Drug Administration was regulating pharmaceutical supplements in beef cattle feed such as hormones and prophylactic antibiotics.

Some animals live on pasture their entire lives and therefore only experience fresh grass; these are typically cow-calf operations in more tropical climates. Backgrounded calves and feedlot animals tend to have different diets that contain more grain than the pasture type. Grain is more expensive than pasture, but the animals grow faster with the higher protein levels. Since cattle are herbivores and need roughage in their diet, silage, hay and/or haylage are all viable feed options. Despite this, 3/4th of the 32 pounds (14.52 kg) of feed cattle consume each day will be corn. Cattle weighing 1,000 lbs. will drink an average of 41 L a day, and approximately 82 L in hot weather. They need a constant supply of good quality feed and potable water according to the 5 Freedoms of Animal Welfare.

Most beef cattle are finished in feedlots. The first feedlots were constructed in the early 1950s. Some of these feedlots grew so large that they warranted a new designation, "Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation" (CAFO). Most American beef cattle spend the last half of their lives in a CAFO.

Cattle processing

A steer that weighs 1000 lb when alive makes a carcass weighing approximately 615 lb once the blood, head, feet, skin, offal and guts are removed. The carcass is then hung in a cold room for between one and four weeks, during which time it loses some weight as water dries from the meat. It is then deboned and cut by a butcher or packing house, with the finished carcass resulting in approximately 430 lb of beef. Depending on what cuts of meat are desired, there is a scale of marbled meat used to determine the quality. Marbling is the fat that is within the muscle, not around it. The more marbled a cut is, the higher it will grade and be worth.

Slaughtering of livestock has three distinct stages: preslaughter handling, stunning, and slaughtering. The biggest concern is preslaughter handling: how the animal is treated before it is stunned and slaughtered. Stress at this time can cause adverse effects on the meat, but water access and lower stocking densities have been allowed to minimize this. However, access to feed is restricted for 12–24 hours prior to slaughtering for ease of evisceration. Stunning is done when the animal is restrained in a chute so movement is limited. Once restrained the animal can be stunned in one of three methods: penetrating captive bolt, non-penetrating captive bolt, and gunshot. Most abattoirs use captive bolts instead of guns. Stunning ensures the animal feels no pain during slaughtering and reduces the animal's stress, therefore increasing the quality of meat. The final step is slaughtering. Typically the animal will be hung by its back leg and its throat will be slit to allow exsanguination. The hide will be removed for further processing at this point and the animal will be broken down with evisceration and decapitation. The carcass will be placed in a cooler for 24–48 hours prior to the meat being cut.

Environmental impact

Cattle farming is one of the most emissive forms of food generation, and least effective uses of land and water as resources. Cattle emit large amounts of methane resulting from their digestive process, and the process of preparing and transporting beef results in a high output of carbon dioxide. Multiple global agencies and governments, including the United Nations, have cited beef production as a primary driver of climate change, and advise that a global reduction in meat consumption should be pursued.

Cattle farming has also been blamed as one of the primary reasons for rapid deforestation in countries such as Brazil and Indonesia, causing habitat loss when deforested land is used either as pasture or to grow feed crop.

Breeds

BreedOriginDescriptionAdaptaurAfrikaner cattleAberdeen AngusAlentejanaAnkoleAustralian BrafordAustralian BrangusAustralian CharbrayBaliBarzonaBeefaloBeef ShorthornBeefmasterBelgian BlueBelmont RedBelted GallowayBlack HerefordBlonde d'AquitaineBonsmaraBoranBrahmanBrangusBritish WhiteCaracuCharolaisChianinaCorrienteCrioulo LageanoDairy ShorthornDexterDroughtmasterEnglish LonghornFleckviehFlorida Cracker cattleGallowayGascon cattleGelbviehHanwooHérensHerefordHighlandHungarian GreyIrish MoiledJabresJapanese ShorthornLimousinLincoln RedLowlineLuingMaduraMaine-AnjouMirandesaMocho NacionalMurray GreyN'damaNeloreNguniNorth DevonPiedmontesePineywoodsPinzgauerRed AngusRed PollRed SindhiRomagnolaRomosinuanoRubia GallegaSalersSanta GertrudisSibi bhagnariSimmentalShorthorn/Beef ShorthornSquare MeaterStabiliserSussexTabapuanTajimaTexas LonghornWagyūWelsh BlackWhite ParkŻubroń
AustraliaA tropically adapted Bos taurus breed, developed from crosses between Herefords and Shorthorns.
South AfricaAfrikaners are usually deep red or black with long spreading horns. They have the small cervico-thoracic hump typical of Sanga cattle.
ScotlandPure black, sometimes with white at udder. Polled. Hardy and thrifty.
Portugal
Uganda
AustraliaDeveloped for resistance to ticks and for heat tolerance by crossing Brahmans and Herefords.
AustraliaPolled breed developed by crossing Angus and Brahman
AustraliaDeveloped by crossing Charolais and Brahman and selected for resistance to heat, humidity, parasites and diseases.
Indonesia
United States (Arizona)Developed in the high desert, inter-mountain region of Arizona.
United StatesHybrid between a cow and an American bison.
England and ScotlandSuitable for both dairy and beef.
United States (Texas)Developed by breeding the Brahman, Shorthorn, and Hereford.
BelgiumGrey roan, or white with grey on head. Extremely muscular (double muscled). Fast-growing if well-fed.
AustraliaA composite breed using Africander (African Sanga) and Hereford-Shorthorn
ScotlandBlack with white band around middle, stocky, fairly long hair, polled. Very hardy and thrifty.
Great BritainA crossbreed produced by crossing a Hereford bull with Holstein or Friesian cows; used to obtain beef offspring from dairy cows. Not maintained as a separate breed, although females may be used for further breeding with other beef bulls.
FrancePale brown, paler round eyes and nose. Muscular. Fast-growing if well-fed.
South AfricaDeveloped from 10/16 Afrikaner, 3/16 Hereford and 3/16 Shorthorn cattle.
East Africa (Ethiopia-Kenya)Usually white, with the bulls being darker (sometimes almost black).
India, Pakistan and United StatesLarge, pendulous ears and dewlaps, hump over the shoulders.
United StatesDeveloped by crossing Angus and Brahman.
Great BritainWhite body, with black (or sometimes red) ears, nose and feet; polled (hornless). Hardy and thrifty.
Brazil
FranceWholly white or cream, lyre-shaped pale horns, or polled. Fast-growing if well-fed.
ItalyDual-purpose, originally large draft breed, later selected for beef.
MexicoHardy, small, athletic, criollo-type, descended from Iberian cattle. Used in rodeo sports, noted for lean meat. Short horns, various colors, often spotted. Also called Criollo or Chinampo.
Iberian Peninsula400-year-old longhorn breed with around 700 individuals that live close to the plateau of Lages, Santa Catarina, Brazil.
United KingdomSuitable for both dairy and beef.
IrelandVery small, black or dun, dark horns. Sometimes has a dwarfing gene, leading to very short legs. Hardy and thrifty.
AustraliaDeveloped by crossing Brahman cattle with taurine breeds, especially the Beef Shorthorn. Tolerant of heat and ticks.
EnglandRed or brindle, with white back and belly. Very long cylindrical horns usually spreading sideways or downwards, often curving and even eventually making a circle. Medium size, hardy.
SwitzerlandRed pied or solid red, polled or horned. Sturdy dual-purpose for beef and dairy. Formerly triple-purpose (beef, dairy and draught). Fast-growing if well-fed.
United StatesSmall, criollo-type descended from cattle brought to the Southern U.S. by the Spanish conquistadors. Adapted to subtropical climate, parasite-resistant. An endangered breed.
ScotlandBlack, stocky, fairly long hair, polled. Very hardy and thrifty.
FranceGrey, hardy, maternal breed. Good growth and conformation of calves. Suitable for all farming systems, bred pure or crossed with a terminal sire.
GermanyRed, strong skin pigmentation, polled. Superior fertility, calving ease, mothering ability, and growth rate of calves.{{cite webtitle = Breeds of Livestockwork = Gelbviehurl = http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/cattle/gelbvieh/archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081104101303/http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/cattle/gelbvieh/archive-date= November 4, 2008url-status= live}}
Korea
Switzerland
EnglandRed, white head, white finching on neck, and white switch.
ScotlandSmall, stocky; black, red, dun or white. Very long coat and very long pale horns, upswept in cows and steers. Very hardy and thrifty.
HungaryRobust, easy-calving and long-lived. Horns long, curved and directed upward. Slender and tall. Well-adapted to extensive pasture systems.
IrelandRed with white back and belly, or white with red ears, nose and feet. Polled. Hardy and thrifty.
Central Java, IndonesiaColors varied from light brown to dark brown with a black stripe spans from back to tail.
JapanA breed of small beef cattle.
Limousin and Marche regions of FranceMid-brown, paler round eyes and nose. Fast-growing if well-fed.
England
AustraliaDeveloped by selectively breeding small Angus cattle.
Luing and surrounding Inner Hebrides, ScotlandRough coat, red-brown, polled. Bred by crossing Beef Shorthorn with Highland. Very hardy and thrifty.
East Java, IndonesiaSmall body, short legs, reddish yellow hair.
Anjou region in FranceRed-and-white pied, polled, fast-growing if well-fed.
Portugal
BrazilPolled
South Eastern AustraliaGrey or silver polled cattle developed from a roan Shorthorn cow and an Angus bull. Easy-care versatile cattle that have been exported to many countries.
West Africa
IndiaExported to Brazil, where it has become a dominant breed.
South AfricaExtremely hardy breed developed by the Nguni tribes for harsh African conditions. Originally derived from the African Sanga cattle, although quite distinct. Three subgroups are recognized: Makhatini, Swazi and Pedi.
Devon, Cornwall and Somerset, EnglandRuby-red, white tail switch, white horns.
Piedmont, ItalyBred both for beef and dairy production; double-muscled. White-coloured and possessing myostatin genes.
Gulf Coast, USLandrace heritage endangered breed, lean, small, adapted to climate of the Deep South, disease-resistant. Short horns, various colors, often spotted.
AustriaIndigenous to the Pinz Valley. Dairy cattle in Europe, but well-adapted to drier landscapes of the US, Australia and South Africa, where they are kept for beef production. Solid red with very distinctive white blaze from wither, down to tail tip and underside.
Australia, United StatesColour variety of Angus in some countries: solid red. Polled.
East Anglia in EnglandRed with white switch, polled (hornless), dual-purpose.
Sindh in PakistanRed Sindhi cattle are the most popular of all zebu dairy breeds. In Pakistan, they are kept for beef production or dairy farming.
ItalyBred primarily for beef production; often used as draught beasts in the past. White or grey with black pigmented skin and upward curving horns.
Colombia
SpainA breed of cattle native to the autonomous community of Galicia in north-western Spain. It is raised mainly for meat. It is distributed throughout Galicia, with about 75% of the population concentrated in the province of Lugo. The coat may be red-blond, wheaten, or cinnamon-coloured.
FranceRed. Hardy, easy calving.
Southern Texas, USDeveloped by crossing red Shorthorn and Brahman.
Sibi BaluchistanThe breed typically has a white or grey coloured body and is black around the neck and has a black tail switch. The head is medium-sized with a short strong neck, small ears, short horns, small dewlap, straight back, wide chest and a moderate sized hump. Dual-purpose (beef & draught).
Western SwitzerlandYellowish-brown, white head. Fast-growing if well-fed. Triple-purpose (beef, dairy and draught).
Northern EnglandRed, red with white back and belly, or white.
New South Wales, AustraliaSmall, grey or silver, polled; similar to Murray Grey.
AmericaBred for efficiency, moderate-sized cow, red or black, polled, composite of native and continental breeds - originally Angus, Hereford, Simmental and Gelbvieh.
South-east EnglandRich chestnut red with white tail switch and white horns. Also used for draught until the early 20th century. Hardy and thrifty.
Brazil
JapanBlack Wagyu bred for internationally renowned beef such as Kobe and Matsuzaka.
United StatesVarious colours, with very long, tapering, upswept horns – extending as much as 80 in tip to tip. Very hardy in dry climates. Light-muscled, so bulls often used for first-calf heifers.
JapanBlack, horned, and noted for heavy marbling (intramuscular fat deposition).
WalesBlack, white upswept horns with black tips. Hardy.
Great Britain, IrelandWhite, with black (or sometimes red) ears, nose and feet; white horns with dark tips. Hardy and thrifty.
PolandHybrid between a cow and a European bison.

References

References

  1. "Beef Production". University of Guelph, Animal Sciences.
  2. (4 April 2013). "Beef Research School: What's the Latest Research on Antimicrobial Resistance?". RealAgricultureOnline.
  3. (10 October 2014). "The History of Fleckvieh Dual Purpose Cattle". Better Dairy Cow.
  4. "Pregnant cows, timing of pregnancy, open cows, pregnancy rate". University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
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  6. Eadie, Jim. (May 16, 2017). "Code of Practice for the Care and Handling of Beef Cattle".
  7. "Code of practice for the care and handling of beef cattle: Review of scientific research on priority issues". Agriculture Canada.
  8. "How much feed will my cow eat". Ministry of Agriculture Alberta.
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  10. [https://www.uaex.edu/publications/PDF/MP391.pdf uaex.edu: "Beef cattle nutrition series - Part 3: Nutrient Requirement Tables"] {{Webarchive. link. (2020-03-02 , University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture publication MP391)
  11. [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_Q2MrAAAAYAAJ/page/n1 National Research Council (U.S.). Subcommittee on Beef Cattle Nutrition: "Nutrient requirements of beef cattle, sixth revised edition 1984"]
  12. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070806192500/http://www.carc-crac.ca/common/Factsheet%20-%20Beef%20English.PDF www.carc-crac.ca: "Recommended code of practice for the care and handling of farm animals: Beef Cattle"], p.2 of the 1991 edition
  13. [https://archive.org/details/beefcattlefeedin1025weic/page/8 Weichenthal, B. A; Russell, H. G (1970): "Beef cattle feeding suggestions : nutrient requirements, balancing rations, protein supplements, suggested rations" Urbana, IL : [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]], College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service
  14. "Feeding Beef Cattle: Tips for a Healthy, Pasture-Based Diet". Mother Earth News.
  15. Pollan, Michael. (2006). "The Omnivores Dilemma". Penguin.
  16. "Beef Cattle: The codes of practice". Agriculture Canada.
  17. "5 Freedoms of Animal Welfare". Canadian Federation of Humane Societies.
  18. "1000 lb. steer to 610 lbs. beef". Oklahoma Food Safety Division.
  19. "What is Marbling in Meat?". The Spruce.
  20. "Meat processing - Livestock slaughter procedures". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  21. "Fact check: How bad is eating meat for the climate? – DW – 10/30/2022".
  22. (2019-08-09). "The UN says we need to reduce our meat consumption to fight climate change and improve food security".
  23. (2007-03-30). "Tropical Deforestation".
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