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100 Elite Registered Brangus Females
Pairs, 3-n-1 Splits, Proven Donors, Bred Heifers & Open Heifers.
Saturday-October 31st-10:00 am est
170 Performance Registered Brangus Bulls
147 of the bulls will be 2 years of age or coming 2 years
Over 60 calving ease bulls.
Only 24 Yearling Bulls (12-15) months
200 Commercial Females
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Value of Eared Feeder Cattle
Joe C. Paschal
When The Ear was first printed I was asked to write an article on how Eared cattle performed in the feedyard (ADG, health, and most importantly PROFIT). I used mostly the Texas A&M Ranch to Rail – South data that we conducted from 1992 until 2004 and fed several thousand head of Bos indicus influenced or Eared steers. Feeders in the South (and in the North I expect) know the value of these types of feeders especially if they are looking for cattle to come into the yards to gain rapidly and efficiently and remain healthy. In the recent past these cattle have in general been undervalued (in price) and it has made them attractive to feed in live animal based marketing systems that are looking for cattle to produce mostly US Select Yield Grade 3 or better carcasses and make money doing it.
Dr. Tom Troxel and Dr. Shane Gadberry, Extension Animal Scientists at the University of Arkansas, have been following and reporting on the value of feeder cattle in Arkansas (a snapshot of the of the type of Southeastern cattle in demand by northern stockers and feeders). Begun in 2000 and repeated every 5 years they looked at the prices paid in weekly livestock auctions in 12 locations in the state and the various phenotypic and genetic factors that affect them. Their phenotypic factors included gender (sex), group size, body fill, body condition and health (based on hair quality, eyes, preconditioning). As genetic factors, they included breed or breedtype (as best as could be determined), color, USDA feeder cattle muscle score and frame size, horn/polledness and weight. Price was converted to a standardized value and represented single lots only. The differences in value reported were those above or below the average for that year.
These results were reported at this year’s American Society of Animal Science Southern Section meeting in Orlando this past February. They found that as the number of lots with more than one head increased, the value of uniform multiple head lots, especially if more than 6 head, were worth $4.39 more per hundredweight in 2005 and $4.94 per hundredweight in 2010. About the same percentage of heifers were sold in each of the three years sampled (45-47%). Fewer bulls were castrated in 2010 even though steers brought premiums of $5.18 (per hundredweight) in 2000, $6.00 in 2005, and $8.21 in 2010!Cattle that were gaunt or shrunk were considerably more valuable than feeders that were full or tanked when sold. However feeder buyers preferred cattle that were in thin to average condition with significant discounts for cattle that were very thin or especially very fat. Very few cattle were considered unhealthy with 96-98% of the feeders being considered healthy each year. Documented preconditioning accounted for about 4% of the feeders sold. Healthy cattle were sold with at a premium but feeders considered unhealthy (dead hair, stale looking, sick, bad eyes, lame, etc) had discounts ranging from $8.95 (for sick) to $32.61 (for stale looking). Preconditioned cattle brought premiums of $4.68 in 2005 and $6.84 in 2010.
In their second report on the effects of genetically influenced phenotype on price, they reported that although the percent of Angus or mostly Angus-sired feeder calves have increased from 7.0% in 2000 to 18.2% in 2010, the average price premium declined 43%! Angus x Hereford feeders, which represented 5.1 to 8.1% of the cattle offered also saw a decline in premium the past 5 years of 36%. Angus x Brahman feeders, representing 9.7% of the feeders offered in 2010 increased in value with a slight premium in 2000 of $0.55 to $1.47 in 2005 to $3.03 in 2010, a 106% increase (and the highest premium increase for any breed or type)! The discounts for ¼ blood Brahman, representing 5-7% of the feeders sold had reduced discounts from 2000 to 2010 (-$3.64 in 2000 to -$2.05, a 43% reduction). Hide color was still important but less so. With 26.6% of the feeders black hided in 2000 and 45% black hided in 2010, premiums for black hides were only $1.86 in 2005 and decreased to $1.70 in 2010. Black hided cattle with a white face (9.8%, 11.1% and 11.9% in 2000, 2005, and 2010) had increased premiums from $0.68 to $2.62 to $3.01 during those years.
Other genetically influenced factors that they reported on included muscling, frame score and horn status. Percentages of cattle increased in the higher muscling categories, larger frame sizes and polledness (either genetically or dehorned). More value was attached (greater premiums or at least no discounts) to cattle with more muscling, larger frame size, and polled or dehorned feeders. Although these premiums may not have been great, the discounts for undesired types (muscle score 3, small framed, and horned cattle) were severe at -$21.78 for muscle score 3, -$16.42 for small frame, and -$4.25 per hundredweight for horned cattle in 2010. Less than 1% of the cattle offered were muscle score 3 or small frame in any of the three years while horned cattle dropped from 25.1% in 2000 to 9.2% of the cattle offered in 2010.
It won’t be enough to just breed Eared cattle. They will sure enough have to be good ones and fit the demands of the market based primarily on muscling (where the greatest discounts can occur) but the market is definitely interested in Eared cattle and will pay more of a premium for them than they have in the past.
In visiting with Dr. Tom Troxel about their work (disclaimer: Tom was our Extension Beef Cattle Specialist in Uvalde for several years before he went to Arkansas 21 years ago to head up their Animal Science Extension group – he is a good scientist as well as a good extension specialist!), Tom said that buyers were looking for cattle to go back on grass as stockers and their interest was in putting more Brahman or Bos indicus into the cattle since they have a real problem with endophyte infested fescue. The Bos indicus genetics and to a lesser degree, through hybrid vigor or heterosis, allows these crosses to be less affected by the endophyte toxicity and they tend to graze and gain and not show the more serious side effects seen in non Bos indicus cattle. Regardless of the reason for the increase in popularity (and value) of the Brahman crosses, they are definitely bringing more! If you are interested in visiting with Tom you might give him a call or email him at (501-671-2188) or ttroxel@uaex.edu .
Dr. Paschal is a livestock specialist for the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service and is based in Corpus Christi, Texas. He can be reached at (361) 265-9203 or j-paschal@tamu.edu
Bee Synch can help boost beef quality and ranchers’ profits
Writer: Blair Fannin, 979-845-2259, b-fannin@tamu.edu
Contact: Dr. Gary Williams, 361-358-6390, glwilliams@tamu.edu
BEEVILLE – With national beef cattle inventory at lows not seen since the 1950s, the time could be right for producers of Brahman-influenced cattle to adopt a fixed-time artificial insemination method which could add thousands of dollars in net value to a calf crop, according to researchers.
Dr. Gary Williams, a reproductive physiologist at the Texas A&M AgriLife Research Station-Beeville, said the shortage of cattle nationwide has resulted in an increased demand for feedlot calves and a shortage of high-quality beef. This has created the perfect opportunity for beef cattle producers to consider adopting technologies that may improve production efficiency and profits.
“Bee Synch, a synchronization of ovulation technique developed for Bos indicus -influenced beef cows, yields fixed-time artificial insemination pregnancy rates of up to 55 percent and makes the use of AI more feasible for a greater number of producers interested in using superior sires in their breeding program,†Williams said.
The research to develop the procedure was conducted in collaboration with Dr. Randy Stanko, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, and Dr. Marcel Amstalden, Texas A&M University-College Station, and supported by Pfizer Animal Health and Select Sires.
“If you have the right genetic background in feedlot-destined calves, and retain ownership through the feedlot, the difference in price at slaughter between those and the average South Texas-sired calf can be as much as $350,†he said. “Multiply that out by hundreds and you are making some serious money. We are seeing some of the national steakhouse chains having problems getting high-quality certified beef. This synchronization method could be a lucrative option for some beef cattle producers to consider.â€
The synchronization process is a modified five-day protocol developed previously at Ohio State University, Williams said. That procedure, known as “5-day Co-Synch + CIDR†has been shown to be “highly effective†for synchronization of ovulation in Bos taurus beef cows (English and Continental-derived breeds), yielding fixed-time artificial insemination pregnancy rates of 60 percent or greater.
However, this and similar procedures have not worked well in the Bos indicus-influenced composite breeds and crossbreeds used commonly across the southern U.S. The Bee Synch process that Williams developed calls for an additional injection of prostaglandin at the start of the five-day synchronization protocol, which reduces the lifespan of a hormone-producing structure on the ovary.
“This improves synchrony and boosts pregnancy rates,†Williams said. “Importantly, the modified procedure does not involve additional cattle handling and utilizes synchronization products already available from Pfizer Animal Health.â€
Williams said one of the main concerns from ranchers considering adoption of these types of technologies is the number of times required to pen cattle, labor costs and stress-related conditions associated with cattle handling. However, the Bee Synch process requires that the cow come through the chute only three times, including artificial insemination.
“This is more attractive to ranchers wanting to use AI to improve herd genetics and marketability, but also wanting to limit the amount of cattle handling required to achieve it,†he said.
Synchronization of ovulation and fixed-time artificial insemination is becoming an increasingly prominent choice for astute cattlemen, Williams said.
“Although it is unlikely in the near future for such technology to overtake traditional South Texas management that uses natural service, the expansion of the national and international market for quality beef, and the current shortage, is creating increased opportunities for producers,†Williams said.
Natural service sires representing Angus, Hereford and other similar breeds noted for meat quality are already being used extensively in southern beef herds. Using semen from superior artificial insemination sires from these breeds is the next logical step. Alternatively, Brahman-influenced composite breeds carrying genes for increased meat quality can also be used.
“If Brahman-influenced cows are handled in a minimal-stress environment, are in good body condition (a minimum body condition score of 5, on a 1 -9 scale), and are at least 45 days post-calving, you can routinely get 50-55 percent of these cows pregnant with a single insemination.â€
Williams said cleanup bulls, turned in seven to 10 days later, can be used to service those not conceiving beginning about three weeks after artificial insemination as they will still be synchronized. Alternatively, another round of artificial insemination can be used before bulls are turned in.
“Using Bee Synch, the ability to infuse highly-desirable genetic traits for meat quality into commercial beef cattle production in the southern U.S. should become an increasing reality,†he said.
Beef in Australia
by Brad Wright
Australia’s beef industry is thriving and looks to get better as the world population is increasing exponentially. Australian beef producers are taking “feed the world†to a whole new level as 65% of all beef produced within the country is exported. The major export markets for beef are Asia, primarily Japan and Korea, and to the U.S. Australia has only 26 million beef cattle and calves compared to Brazil’s 185 million head, but Australia is a narrow 2nd in beef exports to Brazil, exporting almost 3 billion pounds per year. Australia also exports a tremendous amount of live cattle, predominantly to Indonesia. As the world population grows and Australian breeders become increasingly efficient, the export opportunities will continue to grow.
Domestically, recent advancements of the MSA (Meat Standards Australia) grading have put a new focus on quality beef. The retail markets have responded favorably with many only selling MSA qualified beef. This has improved profits for those breeders that are selecting and breeding for improved carcass quality, and with further improvement, could lead to more quality meat export markets for Australian beef producers.
Over 70% of the beef cows used to meet these demands are Bos indicus or Bos indicus influenced. The most prominent cow, especially in herds located in Northern Australia, is the Brahman cow. Bos indicus cattle are a necessity due to their adaptability to harsh environments. These cattle have an innate ability to survive extremely hot summers while having an inherited resistance to ticks, flies, and other insects as well as the diseases they transmit. Bos indicus animals also have the ability to travel the long distances for forage and water. The other factor that cannot be discounted is the Bos indicus female’s ability to regulate birth weight. This allows these cows to be managed in very extensive conditions left to survive on their own. Herds in the Northern Territory of Australia can exceed 100,000 head with mustering, or gathering, only happening once or twice per year to sort off and sell the progeny. Replacement heifers are retained in almost all herds so that there is an inherent selection for cattle suited and adapted to their environment. In most of these herds, the conditions are so tough that a 50% calf crop is considered acceptable. However, selection for fertility and efficiency are primary selection criteria to help improve on those numbers. Dr. Peter Barnard, a leading economist for Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA), stated that a 1% increase in percent calf crop weaned, across all breeders, could add more than one billion dollars to the Australian beef industry.  There is even ongoing research for improved fixed time AI protocols that can hopefully be used in these large herds to increase pregnancy rate and reduce the number of cows that bulls must cover, similar to large programs being run in Brazil and Argentina.
The size of these operations allow for a wide variety of marketing avenues. Many breeders are not focused on one single marketing channel, but rather many channels that allow the producer to select which market will net the most dollars depending on environmental and market value conditions. These large breeders can export cattle live, or harvest cattle for a wide range of markets. In good years, with plenty of grass, these calves can be grass finished to meet Japanese markets or in tough years, the cattle can be sold immediately. Small breeders can use the store sales, similar to our sale barns, to access stockers, feeders, and packers willing to take their cattle through the next phase of production.
The important thing about Australian beef producers is that most make their living off the land. Managing these vast amounts of land and the large numbers of cattle is definitely a full time job. These producers are sound businessmen and cattlemen that manage risk, manage loss, and work diligently to improve their efficiencies and hopefully their bottom lines. As the cattle numbers continue to grow and research allows for greater efficiency, Australian beef producers will continue to lead the charge in feeding beef to the world.
Brahman Crossbred Performance in Multiple Beef Industry Segments
David Riley
Department of Animal Science
Texas A&M University
Introduction
Brahman crossbred cows comprise a large portion of the U.S. cow-calf industry, producing calves of generally ¼ or less Brahman inheritance. Brahman cattle are well-adapted to conditions across the Southern United States. Some calves are managed as stockers in the South and some are fed in South Texas or Southern Arizona, but the majority of Southern cattle enter the stocker and feeder segments on the Great Plains. The obvious environmental differences between that region and the South are climatic and nutritional. Climatic differences are seasonal, as temperatures greatly differ in fall, winter, and spring of most years; humidity is generally lower for most of the year in the Southern Great Plains region than for the Southeastern United States but similar to South-central or Southwestern regions. The nutritional and social world of these Southern calves changes completely in conjunction with long-distance transportation. This results in enormous stress associated with the demand to shift from living and growing in an environment they to which they are well-suited (especially for calves with ½ or more Brahman background), to an environment to which they are not well-adapted. This unusual combination of requirements surely has no equal in the natural world. After completing this feeding process and conversion to product, there is equal market competition with beef from animals not subjected to this routine. It is not surprising that there are difficulties encountered by the calves in this very un-natural process. The purpose of this review is to examine experimental results associated with performance of Brahman crossbreds in multiple environments, that is, in the Southern cow-calf environment and in the stocker and feeder segments, as well as their carcass and end product traits. The way Brahman crossbred animals were produced may dramatically influence experimental results for many traits. The presence of maternal heterosis (dependent upon the cross) will greatly affect performance of ¾ Brahman calves. Probably of greater importance is the fact that calves produced from matings of Brahman bulls to Bos taurus cows are much heavier at birth than calves produced by reciprocal matings; we are accumulating research evidence of this difference for other traits.
Brahman Crossbred Cows in the Southern United States
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The Bos indicus ancestors of the Brahman breed were originally imported and used in the Southern United States (and in similar or harsher areas around the world) because of their adaptation to the extreme conditions characteristic of the region. The ability to survive and reproduce in harsh tropical and subtropical conditions was almost certainly the initial reason that the Brahman breed became an important part of the U.S. beef production system. There is ample research that documents the ability of Brahman purebred and crossbred cattle to live and perform in such subtropical conditions. Brahman cattle have the ability to maintain lower body temperatures and respiration rates under heat duress; they produce less heat than Bos taurus cattle, and may be better able to dissipate that heat. They cope better with parasites such as ticks and horn flies than most cattle of European origin. Brahman and Brahman crosses have been documented with better performance in a variety of traits including a superior ability to minimize the toxic effects of grazing certain fescue varieties in the upper South. Adaptation will continue to be of great importance in beef production.
Almost as important as adaptation today is Brahman contribution to heterosis. Heterosis is the difference between averages of crossbreds and straightbreds for a trait. Substantial levels of heterosis have been experimentally documented for almost all traits of relevance for beef production for Brahman crosses in multiple research settings. Brahman-Bos taurus levels of heterosis are generally much larger than heterosis in crosses of Bos taurus breeds. This heterosis is especially effective for improving traits that are not easily influenced by selection, including critical reproductive traits of cows. Every crossbreeding study in the Southern United States that has involved Brahman has reported tremendous superiority of Brahman crossbred cows. These have included estimates of heterosis for traits like calving rate or weaning rate from 10 to 45% of the weighted straightbred average. Brahman crossbreds have also been highly productive on in colder regions. They have ranked at or near the best for calving rates, weaning rates, weaning weights of their calves and weaning weight per cow exposed to breeding in the GermPlasm Evaluation (GPE) multi-year multi-cycle project in Nebraska (Cundiff, 2005). Excellent performance of F1 Brahman-British cows has been documented in Alberta (Peters and Slen, 1967).
In Florida, an experimental cow herd was built using straightbreds and crossbreds of Brahman, Angus, and Romosinuano (Criollo Bos taurus breed). These cows were born from 2002 through 2005 and were then evaluated through 2010. F1 cows (reciprocal crosses included) were bred to bulls that were of the third breed; straightbred cows of each breed were divided into 2 groups and bred to bulls of the other 2 breeds. Table 1 documents the superior calving rates and weaning rates of the F1 Brahman-Angus and Brahman-Romosinuano (this is a popular South American cross because of the reputation for high fertility) cows in this project. Estimates of heterosis were 22% and 16% for Brahman-Angus and Brahman-Romosinuano, respectively, for weaning rate (Table 1). This work extended the confirmation of this hybrid advantage to Brahman crossed with Criollo cattle—Brahman had previously been documented as having high levels of heterosis with every other evaluated Bos taurus breedtype.
Crossbred Brahman cows excelled in performance on the harsh conditions presented by endophyte-infected tall fescue.  In the work of Brown et al. (2005) Brahman-Angus cows (reciprocal crosses included) grazing bermudagrass had calving rate 13% greater than the purebred average; the corresponding estimate for cows grazing endophyte-infected tall fescue was 49% greater than the purebred average. It seems (particularly in this case) that the severity of the environment appears to augment the effects of heterosis.
The advantages in heterosis and adaptation offered by Brahman crossbred cows are too big to ignore in the Southern United States. These advantages support their widespread use throughout the that region. Approximately 35 to 40% of the calves that enter the U.S. beef production chain have some Brahman background. This large fraction is notable considering market pressure against calves with visible Brahman background (Barham and Troxel, 2007); however, as crosses with Angus (F1 Brahman Angus and ¼ Brahman ¾ Angus) sale price per hundred lb was very high relative to other crossbred groups (Troxel and Barham, 2012).
Transportation/Receiving
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               There are at least 3 major stressors for cattle moved from the Southeastern United States to the Great Plains for stocker and feedlot phases. Those include weaning, long-haul transportation, and the potential for large change (decrease) in ambient temperatures. Many of the cattle moved from the South or Southeast to the Great Plains are freshly weaned in the fall of the year and are consequently very susceptible to health problems, exacerbated by the long transport and the colder weather encountered after arrival. Tropical adaptation that is an advantage in the South becomes a detriment on the Great Plains through the winter. Cattle of any breed or type would find these a challenging set of scenarios.
Brahman F1 steers were heavier than all other steers in Florida at weaning at 7 months of age; they also gained more in the 21 to 35 day period immediately after weaning compared to purebred Brahman and Angus (Table 2; Coleman et al., 2012). Heterosis for ADG in this period was enormous (64%, Table 3). These steers were shipped each year to a research location in Central Oklahoma. F1 Brahman steers had greater shrink on that 24-hour ride than the other breed groups and unfavorable heterosis for shrink (Table 2), but they had greater daily gain in the 28 days after arrival in Oklahoma (relative to receiving weight), with heterosis of 43% (Table 3). This large estimate may in part represent recovery of water lost in transit. There was no death loss during transportation and the receiving period.  These steers were not commingled with steers from other locations, which may have helped minimize potential problems.
Brahman on Winter Pasture
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Among those steers (Coleman et al., 2012), ADG of F1 Brahman-Angus steers grazing winter wheat did not differ from that of Angus steers (Table 2). Brahman-Angus heterosis was 11% (0.2 lb) for ADG during this phase (Table 3).  These steers grazed wheat from November through May; the lower ADG of straightbred Brahman and Romosinuano and F1 Brahman-Romosinuano probably is due in part to their inability to cope well with cold weather, since each of these breed groups would be expected to have minimal adaptation to winter conditions of temperate areas. Straightbred Brahman steers had lower ADG than F1 Brahman-Angus, F1 Brahman-Tuli (African Bos taurus breed), and ¼ Brahman ¼ Hereford ½ Simmental steers on winter pastures in Oklahoma and Texas (Rouquette et al., 2005); ADG of F1 Brahman-Angus steers and ¼ Brahman ¼ Hereford ½ Simmental steers did not differ (Table 4). Ferrell et al. (2006) evaluated steers with fractions of 0, ¼, ½, and ¾ Brahman inheritance in Nebraska; the complementary fraction within each group of steers was MARC III composite (¾ British ¼ Continental). These steers were produced by artificial insemination of MARC III cows and F1 Brahman-MARC III cows to Brahman bulls (½ and ¾ Brahman steers) and F1 Brahman-MARC III cows bred to MARC III bulls (¼ Brahman steers). Steers were fed either bromegrass hay (as a low-gain, forage-based diet) or corn silage (as a high-gain, forage-based diet) in a 119-day growing period in dry lot in order to measure intake. Dry matter intake, crude protein intake, metabolizable energy intake (metabolizable energy is that energy available for maintenance or growth above that required to digest the source from which it was obtained), and ADG of ½ Brahman steers were highest but did not differ from MARC III steers (Table 5). There were no breed group differences in these intakes per pound of gain; that is steers with different fractions of Brahman background responded to these different growing diets similarly. These steers were evaluated in winter, which may have influenced results.
Brahman in Feedlot
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Gain
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In the evaluation of Florida steers, the feedlot phase occurred from May through September in Oklahoma; summers on the Great Plains often have high temperatures. Straightbred Brahman had lower ADG in the feedlot phase than all other breed groups (Table 2), which were similar to each other (Coleman et al., 2012). Brahman-Angus heterosis for ADG was 14% (0.26 lb, Table 3). Feedlot ADG of F1 Brahman-Angus steers did not differ from ¼ Brahman ¼ Hereford ½ Simmental steers (Table 4); these steers were fed during Texas Panhandle summer conditions (Rouquette et al., 2005). Huffman et al. (1990) reported the highest ADG for Angus steers, followed by ¾ Brahman, ½ Brahman, and ¼ Brahman steers (Table 6). Pringle et al. (1997) evaluated steers with fractions 0, ¼, ⅜, ½, ¾, and 1 Brahman (with Angus as the complementary fraction). Days of feeding to reach target backfat end points were lowest for straight Angus, ¼, and ⅜ Brahman steers (Table 7). Steers in both those studies (Huffman et al., 1990; Pringle et al., 1997) were fed in Florida. Sherbeck et al. (1995) reported the highest ADG for Hereford steers as compared to ¼ Brahman ¾ Hereford and ½ Brahman ½ Hereford that were fed in Eastern Colorado (Table 8).
Steers from Cycle V of GPE were evaluated to assess the different aspects of gain while being fed a high concentrate diet (Ferrell and Jenkins, 1998). F1 steers sired by Brahman, Angus, Hereford, Boran, and Tuli sires and out of MARC III cows were assigned to one of 3 groups: 1) an initial (prior to test) slaughter group, in order to facilitate regression estimates of various types of gain; 2) a limit-fed group; and 3) a group fed ad libitum. Table 9 shows means for intake and gain by breed group for these steers. Among the steers in the limit-fed group, Angus and Hereford F1 steers had greater energy gain than the Brahman F1 steers. In the ad libitum group, however, there were no differences in energy gain among these 3 breed groups; all were greater than Boran and Tuli F1 steers. There were no differences for carcass traits within breed and feeding group combinations. Angus F1 steers had greater carcass weight, backfat, and yield grades than Brahman and Hereford (Table 10). Quality grades were lower for Brahman F1 steers, but ribeye area was similar for these 3 breed groups. At low intakes, Brahman F1 steers organ weights were lower than Angus F1 steers, but were similar at high intakes, indicating greater adaptability or responsiveness to increased feed intake than Angus F1 steers. Brahman F1 steers had greater fasting heat production (that is, independent of the heat production associated with digestion) than Angus, and consequently they required a higher metabolizable energy intake for maintenance.  Brahman F1 steers had the highest efficiency of use of metabolizable energy for gain; Angus had the lowest. This work did not support the notion that Brahman cattle have lower energy requirements for maintenance than Bos taurus cattle under those conditions. The influence of the winter feeding conditions of this project was not assessed. Brahman F1 steers seemed to respond and gain to a greater extent than the Bos taurus steers when permitted the higher intake associated with ad libitum feeding.
Intake
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Intake of straightbred Brahman cattle has been reported to be low relative to other breeds or crosses (e.g., Elzo et al., 2009; Table 11); intake of F1 Brahman cattle has often been reported to be high relative to other groups. Dry matter intake means of F1 Brahman-Angus and Angus were essentially the same (Table 2, Coleman et al., 2012). F1 Brahman-Angus and ¾ Brahman ¼ Angus steers had greater dry matter intake than Angus (Table 6; Huffman et al., 1990); these steers were fed in Florida under conditions which may have depressed the appetites of straightbred Angus steers. Among steers and heifers fed in North Florida, Elzo et al. (2009) reported intake means of animals grouped by residual feed intake (RFI) values. Residual feed intake is daily dry matter intake of an animal adjusted to the average size (metabolic weight) and growth rate (ADG) of cattle evaluated together; low (that is, negative values, since by definition the mean RFI = 0) RFI values are considered to be favorable. Among those calves (from the work of Elzo et al., 2009) that were in the high RFI group (that is, inefficient) and the medium RFI group, F1 Brahman-Angus, â…œ Brahman â… Angus and ¼ Brahman ¾ Angus all had higher daily intake than Angus (Table 11). However, the breed group daily intake differences were much lower among the low RFI (efficient) group of calves. In their comparison of F1 steers, Ferrell and Jenkins (1998) reported greater F1 Angus-MARC III intake (dry matter and metabolizable energy) than that of F1 Brahman-MARC III steers when fed ad libitum; Brahman F1 steer intake did not differ from F1 Hereford-MARC III intake (Table 9). They reported no breed differences when steers were limit-fed. Ferrell et al. (2006) reported that dry matter intake, crude protein intake, and metabolizable energy intake of F1 Brahman-MARC III steers and MARC III steers did not differ in a growing phase when fed a high roughage diet or when fed a high concentrate feed diet; these were higher than ¼ Brahman and Brahman steers (Table 5). Estimates of heritability for intake or RFI are as large as those for weight traits, which are easily altered with selection. Selective improvement of efficiency by lowering RFI of steers would almost certainly result in decreased intake in their half siblings that will become the cows on pasture in the South (C. L. Ferrell, J. O. Sanders, personal communication).  This seems counter to the best interests of a producing cow in order to conceive, maintain pregnancy, and perform maternally. Forbes et al. (1998) reported superior intakes of F1 Brahman cows on pasture relative to other breed types. There may be heterosis for intake on pasture or for the efficient utilization of nutrients from such a forage diet. There may be heterosis for intake in steers fed a high concentrate diet; but it was not detected in Brahman-Angus, Brahman-Romosinuano, or Angus-Romosinuano (Coleman et al., 2012).
Brahman Carcass Traits
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In U.S. research trials (Tables 2, 4-8, 10, 12, 13), Brahman F1 steers have generally had better than average carcass traits related to quantity (carcass weight, dressing percentage, backfat thickness, ribeye area, and yield grade; of course under the assumption that less fat is desirable), but generally lower values for traits related to quality (marbling score, Warner-Bratzler shear force, trained sensory evaluation of tenderness). Results of Brahman (and other Bos indicus breeds) across the duration of the GPE cycles in Nebraska were similar (Wheeler et al., 2005). Experimental results have indicated that ¼ Brahman steers did not differ from straightbred Bos taurus for marbling score/quality grade or Warner-Bratzler shear force/sensory panel tenderness (Tables 5, 6). Exceptions to this included the results (Tables 7 and 8) of Sherbeck et al. (1995) and Pringle et al. (1997). However, Pringle et al. (1997) reported no difference between quality grades of ¼ Brahman and Angus groups, as well as no marbling score differences of F1 Brahman-Angus and straightbred Angus steers. No interaction of sire breed and dam breed (representative of breed type) was detected in analyses of marbling score, Warner-Bratzler shear force, and sensory panel tenderness (Riley et al., 2012), but Brahman sire breed means were lower than Angus and Romosinuano for these traits (Table 12). Results from one of the largest comparisons of steers with differing backgrounds of Brahman (Elzo et al., 2012) indicated no difference in tenderness of steaks from ¼ Brahman, F1 Brahman-Angus, and Angus steers, but Warner-Brazler shear forces of Angus were slightly better than either.  All breed groups with any proportion Brahman had lower marbling scores than Angus steers (Table 13). The differences between straightbred Brahman and Bos taurus shear force are real and confirmed by most research to date. Much of the research results involving F1 Brahman, and really almost all of the ¼ Brahman results (especially when carcasses were electrically-stimulated) reported Warner-Bratzler shear force averages of 10 lb or less, which fits into at least a category of ‘slightly tender’ (see Platter et al., [2005]; Boleman et al. [1997] and Miller et al. [2001] also presented different assessments of consumer acceptability and Warner-Bratzler shear force values in which this threshold of 10 lb appears consistent). Within GPE, F1 Brahman steers had higher Warner-Bratzler shear force and lower sensory panel tenderness means than F1 Hereford-Angus, F1 Hereford-MARC III, and F1 Angus-MARC III, and were more variable (Wheeler et al., 2005). Marbling score of crossbred Brahman steers has been consistently reported to be lower than Angus or British crossbreds. There appears to be substantial additive genetic variation to permit selective improvement of marbling score in the Brahman breed (Smith et al., 2009).
Summary
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- Brahman crossbred cows continue to be used in the Southern United States because of superior adaptability to rough conditions and the high levels of heterosis for most traits (but especially reproductive traits) as crosses with really any Bos taurus breed.
- The movement of Brahman crossbred calves from the South to the Great Plains represents an enormous stress on these animals. Calves with as much as ½ Brahman background appear to grow and perform very well in the stocker and feeder phases on the Great Plains, especially during the summer. Stocker programs in the South may be advantageous for cattle to recover from the stress of weaning and gain weight, but also to avoid spending winter on the Great Plains. Crossbreds with more than ½ Brahman would likely perform better in feedlots in areas with milder winters, e.g., South Texas or Southern Arizona.
- After feeding, Brahman crossbred carcasses generally have very good values for traits related to quantity of beef. Most research has documented lower marbling scores (as well as all fat content) and therefore quality grades of carcasses from Brahman crossbreds. There appear to be selective opportunities to improve marbling score in the Brahman breed, should that become an appropriate goal.
- Steers of ¼ Brahman inheritance and to a lesser extent, F1 Brahman steers, are the most likely Brahman crossbreds to enter the conventional beef production process, especially the feedlot segment on the Great Plains. Cattle that are ¼ Brahman will qualify for many premium carcass programs. There is substantial research that indicates that both types will perform acceptably for most traits of economic importance.
- Selection for reduced RFI as a method of improving efficiency during the feedlot stage is discouraged within the breed, as anything that would suppress intake of Brahman crossbred cows on pasture conditions would be undesirable.
References
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Barham, B. L., and T. R. Troxel. 2007. Factors affecting the selling price of feeder cattle sold at Arkansas livestock auctions in 2005. J. Anim. Sci. 85:3434–3441.
Boleman, S. J., S. L. Boleman, R. K. Miller, J. F. Taylor, H. R. Cross, T. L. Wheeler, M. Koohmaraie, S. D. Shackelford, M. F. Miller, R. L. West, D. D. Johnson, and J. W. Savell. 1997. Consumer evaluation of beef of known categories of tenderness. J. Anim. Sci. 75:1521–1524.
Brown, M. A., A. H. Brown, Jr., and B. A. Sandelin. 2005. Genotype × environment interactions in Brahman, Angus, and reciprocal cross cows and their calves. Pages 182 to 197 in: A Compilation of Research Results Involving Tropically Adapted Beef Cattle Breeds. Southern Coop. Series Bull. 405. http://www.lsuagcenter.com/en/crops_livestock/livestock/beef_cattle/breeding_genetics/tropical+breeds.htm.
Coleman, S. W., C. C. Chase, Jr., W. A. Phillips, D. G. Riley, and T. A. Olson. 2012. Evaluation of tropically adapted straightbred and crossbred cattle: Postweaning gain and feed efficiency when finished in a temperate climate. J. Anim. Sci. In press.
Cundiff, L. V. 2005. Performance of tropically adapted breeds in a temperate environment: Calving, growth, reproduction and maternal traits. Pages 131 to 143 in: A Compilation of Research Results Involving Tropically Adapted Beef Cattle Breeds. Southern Coop. Series Bull. 405. http://www.lsuagcenter.com/en/crops_livestock/livestock/beef_cattle/breeding_genetics/tropical+breeds.htm.
Elzo, M. A., D. D. Johnson, J. G. Wasdin, and J. D. Driver. 2012. Carcass and meat palatability breed differences and heterosis effects in an Angus-Brahman multibreed population. Meat Sci. 90:87–92.
Elzo, M. A., D. G. Riley, G. R. Hansen, D. D. Johnson, R. O. Myer, S. W. Coleman, C. C. Chase, J. G. Wasdin, and J. D. Driver. 2009. Effect of breed composition on phenotypic residual feed intake and growth in Angus, Brahman, and Angus × Brahman crossbred cattle. J. Anim. Sci. 87:3877–3886.
Ferrell, C. L., E. D. Berry, H. C. Freetly, and D. N. Miller. 2006. Influence of genotype and diet on steer performance, manure odor, and carriage of pathogenic and other fecal bacteria. I. Animal performance. J. Anim. Sci. 84:2545–2522.
Ferrell, C. L., and T. G. Jenkins. 1998. Body composition and energy utilization by steers of diverse genotypes fed a high-concentrate during the finishing period: II. Angus, Boran, Brahman, Hereford, and Tuli sires. J. Anim. Sci. 76:647–657.
Forbes, T. D. A., F. M. Rouquette, Jr., and J. W. Holloway. 1998. Comparisons among Tuli-, Brahman-, and Angus-sired heifers: intake, digesta kinetics, and grazing behavior. J. Anim. Sci. 76:220–227.
Huffman, R. D., S. E. Williams, D. D. Hargrove, D. D. Johnson, and T. T. Marshall. 1990. Effects of percentage Brahman and Angus breeding, age-season of feeding and slaughter end point on feedlot performance and carcass characteristics. J. Anim. Sci. 68:2243–2252.
Miller, M. F., M. A. Carr, C. B. Ramsey, K. L. Crockett, and L. C. Hoover. 2001. Consumer thresholds for establishing the value of beef tenderness. J. Anim. Sci. 79:3062–3068.
Peters, H. F., and S. B. Slen. 1967. Brahman-British beef cattle crosses in Canada. I. Weaned calf production under range conditions. Can. J. Anim. Sci. 47:145–151.
Platter, W. J., J. D. Tatum, K. E. Belk, S. R. Koontz, P. L. Chapman, and G. C. Smith. 2005. Effects of marbling and shear force on consumers’ willingness to pay for beef strip loin steaks. J. Anim. Sci. 83:890–899.
Pringle, T. D., S. E. Williams, B. S. Lamb, D. D. Johnson, and R. L. West. 1997. Carcass characteristics, the calpain proteinase system, and aged tenderness of Angus and Brahman crossbred steers. J. Anim. Sci. 75:2955–2961.
Riley, D. G., C. C. Chase, Jr., S. W. Coleman, W. A. Phillips, M. F. Miller, J. C. Brooks, D. D. Johnson, and    T. A. Olson. 2012. Genetic effects on carcass quantity, quality, and palatability traits in straightbred and crossbred Romosinuano steers. J. Anim. Sci. In press.
Rouquette, F. M., Jr., J. J. Cleere, C. R. Long, and R. D. Randel. 2005. Birth to harvest attributes of Brahman and Brahman-influenced steers. Pages 40 to 59 in: A Compilation of Research Results Involving Tropically Adapted Beef Cattle Breeds. Southern Cooperative Series Bulletin 405. http://www.lsuagcenter.com/en/crops_livestock/livestock/beef_cattle/breeding_genetics/tropical+breeds.htm.
Sherbeck, J. A., J. D. Tatum, T. G. Field, J. B. Morgan, and G. C. Smith. 1995. Feedlot performance, carcass traits, and palatability traits of Hereford and Hereford x Brahman steers. J. Anim. Sci. 73:3613–3620.
Smith, T., J. D. Domingue, J. C. Paschal, D. E. Franke, T. D. Bidner, and G. Whipple. 2007. Genetic parameters for growth and carcass traits of Brahman steers. J. Anim. Sci. 85:1377–1384.
Troxel, T. R., and B. L. Barham. 2012. Phenotypic expression and management factors affecting the selling price of feeder cattle sold at Arkansas livestock auctions. Prof. Anim. Sci. 28:64–72.
Wheeler, T. L., S. D. Shackelford, and M. Koohmaraie. 2005. Carcass and meat traits of tropically adapted breeds evaluated at the U.S. Meat Animal Research Center. Pages 154 to 161 in: A Compilation of Research Results Involving Tropically Adapted Beef Cattle Breeds. Southern Coop. Series Bull. 405. http://www.lsuagcenter.com/en/crops_livestock/livestock/beef_cattle/breeding_genetics/tropical+breeds.htm.
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Table 1. Brahman, Angus, and Romosinuano straightbred and crossbred cow reproductive traits
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N |
Pregnancy rate |
Calving rate |
Weaning rate |
|
Straightbred | ||||
Brahman |
175 |
0.76 |
0.76 |
0.70 |
Angus |
161 |
0.84 |
0.84 |
0.82 |
Romosinuano |
194 |
0.82 |
0.82 |
0.78 |
F1 | ||||
Brahman-Angus |
420 |
0.95 |
0.95 |
0.93 |
Brahman-Romosinuano |
462 |
0.89 |
0.89 |
0.86 |
Romosinuano-Angus |
397 |
0.87 |
0.86 |
0.81 |
Heterosis | ||||
Brahman-Angus |
0.15 (18%) |
0.15 (19%) |
0.17 (22%) |
|
Brahman-Romosinuano |
0.10 (13%) |
0.10 (13%) |
0.12 (16%) |
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1Cows were born from 2002 to 2005 and were first exposed to bulls as yearlings. First calves as 2-year olds not included in these results. Records through 2010 were included in these results.
2Cows were exposed to bulls annually: F1 cows were exposed to bulls of the 3rd breed. Straightbred cows of each breed were exposed in approximately equal numbers to bulls of the other 2 breeds.
3Reciprocal F1 cows combined into single groups.
4Heterosis was not detected for Romosinuano-Angus cows for these traits.
5Numbers represent numbers of cows in each breed group for palpation. Cows in excess of 40 for each breed group were sold as bred 3-year olds.
6Cows were culled after 2 failures to wean a calf.
Table 2. Growth of straightbred and F1 steers weaned in Florida and transported to Oklahoma
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Brahman |
Angus |
Romosinuano |
F1 BA |
F1 BR |
F1 RA |
|
N | Â Â Â 48 | Â Â Â 38 | Â Â Â 74 | Â Â Â 77 | Â 113 | Â 118 |
Prewean ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â Â Â 1.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.0 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.0 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.8 |
Weaning BW, lb | Â 518 | Â 441 | Â 465 | Â 537 | Â 524 | Â 487 |
Postwean recovery | ||||||
ADG, lb/d (21 to 35 d) | Â Â Â Â Â 0.8 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.2 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.9 |
Transition | ||||||
Shipping BW, lb | Â 545 | Â 465 | Â 483 | Â 579 | Â 555 | Â 518 |
Ship loss, % | Â Â Â Â Â 8.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 9.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 8.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 9.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 8.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 9.4 |
Receiving ADG, lb/day (28 d) | Â Â Â Â Â 0.4 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.0 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.4 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.0 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.5 |
Wheat pasture | ||||||
Final BW, lb | Â 811 | Â 853 | Â 784 | Â 951 | Â 864 | Â 872 |
ADG, lb/d | Â Â Â Â Â 1.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.0 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.0 |
Feedlot | ||||||
Final BW, lb | 1045 | 1100 | 1062 | 1217 | 1121 | 1159 |
ADG, lb/d | Â Â Â Â Â 1.8 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.2 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.2 |
Overall ADG, lb/day (wean to final) | Â Â Â Â Â 1.4 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.8 |
Intake/efficiency | ||||||
N | Â Â Â 27 | Â Â Â 30 | Â Â Â 29 | Â Â Â 57 | Â Â Â 61 | Â Â Â 57 |
DMI, lb/d | Â Â Â 17.5 | Â Â Â 18.9 | Â Â Â 18.7 | Â Â Â 19.2 | Â Â Â 18.0 | Â Â Â 19.5 |
Feed:Gain | Â Â Â Â Â 7.75 | Â Â Â Â Â 8.26 | Â Â Â Â Â 7.58 | Â Â Â Â Â 7.91 | Â Â Â Â Â 7.84 | Â Â Â Â Â 7.97 |
Residual feed intake |    –0.37 |      0.66 |    –0.01 |    –0.20 |    –0.44 |      0.60 |
Carcass | ||||||
N | Â Â Â 48 | Â Â Â 38 | Â Â Â 72 | Â Â Â 79 | Â 109 | Â 118 |
Carcass wt, lb | Â 657 | Â 695 | Â 671 | Â 778 | Â 721 | Â Â Â 738 |
Dressing percentage | Â Â Â 61.5 | Â Â Â 61.5 | Â Â Â 61.5 | Â Â Â 63.1 | Â Â Â 62.1 | Â Â Â 62.5 |
Fat thickness, in | Â Â Â Â Â 0.42 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.63 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.41 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.63 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.48 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.52 |
Ribeye area, in2 | Â Â Â 11.1 | Â Â Â 12.1 | Â Â Â 12.0 | Â Â Â 12.4 | Â Â Â 12 | Â Â Â 12.6 |
Ribeye area, in2/100 lb carcass | Â Â Â Â Â 1.70 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.75 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.81 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.61 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.68 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.72 |
Yield grade | Â Â Â Â Â 2.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.3 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.2 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.1 |
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1Means of F1 steers include reciprocal crosses.
2Postwean recovery period was from 21 to 35 d. Steers were weaned at average of 7 months of age.
3Steers were weighed immediately prior to loading in Florida and immediately after unloading in Oklahoma. Steers were kept in a grass paddock with access to feed for the 28-day receiving period.
4Steers grazed wheat pasture for an average of 120 days.
5A subset of steers (n = 90) from all breed groups was evaluated for intake and efficiency each year (2003, 2004, 2005) using Calan feeding system.
6Steers were randomly assigned to feeding periods which averaged 101, 129, and 157 days (summer feeding), and were slaughtered commercially in the Texas Panhandle.
7Adapted from Coleman et al. (2012) and Riley et al. (2012).
Table 3. Estimates of heterosis, direct and maternal breed effects for steer traits
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 |
Heterosis |
|||||||
Brahman-Angus |
Brahman-Romosinuano |
Romosinuano-Angus |
||||||
 |
Amount |
% |
Amount |
% |
Amount |
% |
||
Prewean ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â 0.20 | 11 | Â 0.13 | Â 7.2 | Â 0.13 | Â Â Â 7.8 | ||
Wean BW, lb | Â 57 | 12 | 33 | Â 6.7 | 35 | Â Â Â 7.8 | ||
Postwean recovery ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â 0.46 | 63.6 | Â 0.29 | Â 46 | ||||
Shipping BW, lb | Â 75 | 14.8 | 39.7 | Â 7.7 | 44 | Â Â Â 9.3 | ||
Ship loss, lb | Â Â Â 8.4 | 18.5 | Â 5.5 | 12.5 | Â 6.2 | Â 14.4 | ||
Arrival BW, lb | Â 66.1 | 14.4 | 35.3 | Â 7.5 | 37.5 | Â Â Â 8.7 | ||
Receive ADG, lb/day |    0.29 | 42.6 |  0.15 | 42.4 | –0.20 | –30 | ||
Winter wheat | ||||||||
Initial BW, lb | Â 81.6 | 15.5 | 44.1 | Â 8.4 | 35.3 | Â Â Â 7.1 | ||
Final BW, lb | 119.1 | 14.3 | 66.1 | Â 8.3 | 52.9 | Â Â Â 6.5 | ||
ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â 0.20 | 11 | Â 0.13 | Â 8.3 | Â 0.07 | Â Â Â 3.4 | ||
Feedlot | ||||||||
Final BW, lb | Â 29.5 | 13.4 | 66.1 | Â 6.3 | 77.2 | Â Â Â 7.1 | ||
ADG, lb/d | Â Â Â 0.26 | 13.6 | ||||||
Overall ADG, lb/day |    0.26 | 16.1 |  0.13 |  8.6 |  0.11 |    6.3 | ||
Feed:Gain | Â Â Â 8.17 | 14.1 | ||||||
Carcass wt, lb | 102 | 15.1 | 57 | Â 8.6 | 56 | Â Â Â 8.1 | ||
Dressing percentage | Â Â Â 1.7 | Â 2.7 | Â 1.1 | Â Â Â 1.7 | ||||
Fat thickness, in | Â Â Â 0.10 | 19.9 | Â 0.06 | 15.6 | ||||
Ribeye area, in2 | Â Â Â 0.82 | Â 7.1 | Â 0.39 | Â 3.3 | Â 0.56 | Â Â Â 5 | ||
Ribeye area, in2 / 100 lb |  –0.11 | –6.6 | –0.08 | –4.3 | –0.06 |  –3 | ||
Yield grade | Â Â Â 0.4 | 13.6 | Â 0.3 | Â 9.5 | ||||
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1Adapted from Coleman et al. (2012). Trait details correspond to those described in Table 1.
2Empty cells indicate that effects were not statistically different from 0.
3Traits from Table 2 are omitted here if no heterosis was detected.
4Adapted from Coleman et al. (2012) and Riley et al. (2012).
Table 4. Growth and carcass traits of Brahman straightbred and crossbred steers
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 | ¼ Brahman ¼ Hereford
½ Simmental |
½ Brahman ½ Angus |
½ Brahman ½ Tuli |
Brahman |
N | Â 47 | Â 35 | Â 37 | Â 30 |
ADG winter, lb/day | Â Â Â 2.5 | Â Â Â 2.4 | Â Â Â 2.0 | Â Â Â 1.7 |
ADG feedlot, lb/day | Â Â Â 3.2 | Â Â Â 3.4 | Â Â Â 2.6 | Â Â Â 2.9 |
Carcass wt, lb | 889 | 848 | 685 | 672 |
Backfat, in | Â Â Â 0.37 | Â Â Â 0.48 | Â Â Â 0.33 | Â Â Â 0.25 |
Ribeye area, in2 | Â 14 | Â 13.5 | Â 12.3 | Â 11.4 |
Yield grade | Â Â Â 2.78 | Â Â Â 3.06 | Â Â Â 2.44 | Â Â Â 2.47 |
Marbling score | 366 | 392 | 367 | 342 |
Shear force, lb | Â Â Â 7.9 | Â Â Â 8.1 | Â Â Â 8.1 | Â 10.3 |
Tenderness score | Â Â Â 6.0 | Â Â Â 5.8 | Â Â Â 6.0 | Â Â Â 5.3 |
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1Weaned steers grazed cool-season annuals in East Texas or Central Oklahoma from December to mid-May.
2Steers were commercially-fed in the Texas Panhandle in the summers of 1993 and 1994 to a target of 0.4 inches of backfat.
3Marbling score 300 to 399 = Select.
4Tenderness scores evaluated by a trained panel using values from 1 (extremely tough) to 8 (extremely tender).
5Adapted from Rouquette et al. (2005).
Table 5. Comparison of intake, growth, and carcass traits of steers with different fractions of Brahman inheritance in Nebraska
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Fraction of Brahman inheritance |
0 |
¼ |
½ |
¾ |
N |
15 |
20 |
7 |
9 |
Growing period | ||||
Initial weight, lb | Â 602 | Â 562 | Â 708 | Â 604 |
Final weight, lb | Â 796 | Â 717 | Â 906 | Â 747 |
ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â Â Â 1.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.3 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.2 |
Dry matter intake lb/day | Â Â Â 16.1 | Â Â Â 13.7 | Â Â Â 17.6 | Â Â Â 14.6 |
Crude protein intake, lb/day | Â Â Â Â Â 1.7 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.5 | Â Â Â Â Â Â 1.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.6 |
Metabolizable energy intake, Mcal/day | Â Â Â 18.1 | Â Â Â 15.2 | Â Â Â 19.7 | Â Â Â 16.2 |
DMI/gain lb/lb | Â Â Â 13.2 | Â Â Â 13.9 | Â Â Â 13.2 | Â Â Â 19.2 |
Crude protein intake/gain, lb/lb | Â Â Â Â Â 1.3 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.4 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.4 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.9 |
Metabolizable energy intake/gain lb/lb | Â Â Â 30.8 | Â Â Â 32.5 | Â Â Â 31 | Â Â Â 44.3 |
Residual ADG |    –0.02 |      0.03 |      0.02 |    –0.03 |
Residual metabolizable energy intake |      0.46 |    –0.44 |    –0.03 |    –0.13 |
Finishing period | ||||
Initial weight, lb | Â 796 | Â 717 | Â 906 | Â 747 |
Final weight, lb | 1241 | 1213 | 1268 | 1246 |
Days to finish | Â 155 | Â 196 | Â 134 | Â 199 |
ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â Â Â 2.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.6 |
Dry matter intake lb/day | Â Â Â 18.5 | Â Â Â 17.0 | Â Â Â 18.5 | Â Â Â 15.0 |
Crude protein intake, lb/day | Â Â Â Â Â 2.2 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.0 | Â Â Â Â Â 2.2 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.8 |
Metabolizable energy intake, Mcal/day | Â Â Â 26 | Â Â Â 23.8 | Â Â Â 25.9 | Â Â Â 21 |
Dry matter intake/gain lb/lb | Â Â Â Â Â 6.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 6.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 7.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 5.9 |
Crude protein intake/gain lb/lb | Â Â Â Â Â 0.75 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.74 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.82 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.68 |
Metabolizable energy intake/gain lb/lb | Â Â Â 20.1 | Â Â Â 20.5 | Â Â Â 21.9 | Â Â Â 18.3 |
Residual ADG |      0.04 |    –0.05 |    –0.01 |      0.05 |
Residual metabolizable energy intake |      0.46 |    –0.44 |    –0.03 |    –0.13 |
Final wt, lb | 1243 | 1213 | 1268 | 1248 |
Carcass | ||||
Carcass wt, lb | Â 750 | Â 745 | Â 792 | Â 769 |
Dressing percentage | Â Â Â 60.4 | Â Â Â 61.6 | Â Â Â 62.3 | Â Â Â 61.6 |
Marbling score | Â 470 | Â 490 | Â 390 | Â 364 |
Quality grade | Â Â Â 16.2 | Â Â Â 16.2 | Â Â Â 15 | Â Â Â 14.3 |
Fat thickness, in | Â Â Â Â Â 0.40 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.59 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.57 |
Adjusted fat thickness, in | Â Â Â Â Â 0.35 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.43 | Â Â Â Â Â 0.53 |
Ribeye area, in2 | Â Â Â 12.4 | Â Â Â 11.5 | Â Â Â 12.2 | Â Â Â 11.8 |
Yield grade | Â Â Â Â Â 2.86 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.45 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.38 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.29 |
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1The complementary fraction of steers in each breed group was MARC III (¾ British ¼ Continental).
2Steers were fed through the winter either diets of bromegrass hay or corn silage during the growing period of 119 days.
3Steers were fed to a target body weight of 1,235 lb.
4Marbling score:Â Slight = 300; Small = 400; Modest = 500.
5Quality grade: Selecto = 14, Select+ = 15, Choice– = 16.
6Adapted from Ferrell et al. (2006).
Table 6. Growth, efficiency, and carcass means for steers of different fractions of Brahman inheritance
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Fraction of Brahman inheritance |
0 |
¼ |
½ |
¾ |
Feedlot | ||||
N | Â Â Â 41 | Â Â Â 42 | Â Â Â 41 | Â Â Â 41 |
Days on feed | Â 121 | Â 103 | Â 102 | Â 107 |
Slaughter wt, lb | 1012 | Â 990 | 1087 | 1100 |
ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â Â Â 3.5 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.9 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.9 |
Dry matter intake, lb/day | Â Â Â 19.4 | Â Â Â 19.4 | Â Â Â 21.6 | Â Â Â 21.8 |
Feed:Gain | Â Â Â Â Â 5.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 5.4 | Â Â Â Â Â 5.6 | Â Â Â Â Â 5.6 |
Carcass | ||||
N | Â Â Â 31 | Â Â Â 32 | Â Â Â 31 | Â Â Â 31 |
Carcass wt, lb | Â 637 | Â 624 | Â 683 | Â 701 |
Dressing percentage | Â Â Â 63 | Â Â Â 62 | Â Â Â 62.6 | Â Â Â 63.4 |
Ribeye area, in2 | Â Â Â 11.6 | Â Â Â 10.9 | Â Â Â 11.3 | Â Â Â 11.6 |
Ribeye area, in2/100 lb | Â Â Â Â Â 1.83 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.76 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.69 | Â Â Â Â Â 1.69 |
Yield grade | Â Â Â Â Â 2.8 | Â Â Â Â Â 3 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.1 | Â Â Â Â Â 3.1 |
Marbling score | Â Sm13 | Â Sm11 | Â Sl70 | Â Sl30 |
% Choice | Â Â Â 55 | Â Â Â 66 | Â Â Â 29 | Â Â Â Â Â 7 |
% Select | Â Â Â 45 | Â Â Â 34 | Â Â Â 65 | Â Â Â 74 |
% Standard | Â Â Â Â Â 0 | Â Â Â Â Â 0 | Â Â Â Â Â 6 | Â Â Â 19 |
Â
1The complementary fraction of breed inheritance was Angus.
2Steers were either fed as calves or grazed winter pastures until June and were then fed in Florida in 1985 and 1986. There were fed to 2 backfat end point targets: 0.4 or 0.6 in. Intake was assessed using the Calan system. No breed by age-season interactions detected.
3Adapted from Huffman et al. (1990).
Table 7. Growth and carcass traits for steers with different fractions of Brahman inheritance
Â
Fraction of Brahman inheritance |
0 |
¼ |
⅜ |
½ |
¾ |
1 |
N | Â 11 | Â 13 | Â 10 | Â 12 | Â 12 | Â 11 |
Days on feed | 156 | 156 | 157 | 172 | 168 | 202 |
Carcass | Â | Â | Â | Â | Â | Â |
Carcass wt, lb | 692 | 728 | 679 | 739 | 697 | 712 |
Dressing percentage | Â 60.7 | Â 61.8 | Â 60.5 | Â 63.1 | Â 61.9 | Â 62.7 |
Fat thickness, in | Â Â Â 0.47 | Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â 0.39 | Â Â Â 0.43 | Â Â Â 0.47 | Â Â Â 0.39 |
Ribeye area, in2 | Â 12.4 | Â 11.6 | Â 11.3 | Â 12.4 | Â 11.3 | Â 73 |
Ribeye area, in2/100 lb | Â Â Â 1.83 | Â Â Â 1.62 | Â Â Â 1.69 | Â Â Â 1.69 | Â Â Â 1.62 | Â Â Â 1.62 |
Yield grade | Â Â Â 2.8 | Â Â Â 3.2 | Â Â Â 2.8 | Â Â Â 2.8 | Â Â Â 3.1 | Â Â Â 3 |
Marbling score | 436 | 418 | 416 | 366 | 354 | 315 |
Quality grade | 607 | 594 | 595 | 556 | 547 | 521 |
% Choice | Â 82 | Â 54 | Â 60 | Â 25 | Â 17 | Â Â Â 9 |
% Select | Â 18 | Â 46 | Â 40 | Â 58 | Â 58 | Â 64 |
% Standard | Â Â Â 0 | Â Â Â 0 | Â Â Â 0 | Â 17 | Â 25 | Â 27 |
Shear force (14 days aging), lb | Â Â Â 9.5 | Â 11.0 | Â Â Â 9.3 | Â 10.4 | Â 10.6 | Â 13.4 |
Tenderness | Â Â Â 5.9 | Â Â Â 5.3 | Â Â Â 6.1 | Â Â Â 5.6 | Â Â Â 5.5 | Â Â Â 4.4 |
Connective tissue amount | Â Â Â 6.1 | Â Â Â 5.9 | Â Â Â 6.3 | Â Â Â 6 | Â Â Â 6 | Â Â Â 5 |
Â
1The complementary fraction of inheritance in these steers was Angus.
2Steers grazed winter pastures until approximately 1 year of age. They were contract fed in Florida through the winter to backfat end points of either 0.4 or 0.6 inch and slaughtered at University of Florida facilities.
3Marbling score:Â Slight = 300 to 399; Small = 400 to 499.
4Quality grade: Select– = 500 to 549; Select+ = 550 to 599; Choice– = 600 to 633.
5Detectable amount of connective tissue and tenderness scores evaluated by a trained panel using values from 1 (extremely tough; abundant amount) to 8 (none detected, extremely tender).
6Adapted from Pringle et al. (1997).
Table 8. Growth and carcass traits of steers with different fractions of Brahman inheritance
Â
Fraction of Brahman inheritance |
0 |
¼ |
½ |
N | Â 77 | Â 80 | Â 79 |
ADG, lb/day | Â Â Â 4.0 | Â Â Â 3.5 | Â Â Â 3.3 |
Carcass wt, lb | 699 | 703 | 719 |
Fat thickness, in | Â Â Â 0.45 | Â Â Â 0.44 | Â Â Â 0.41 |
Ribeye area , in2 | Â 11.8 | Â 12.4 | Â 12.4 |
Yield grade | Â Â Â 3.11 | Â Â Â 2.91 | Â Â Â 2.92 |
Marbling score | Â Sl91 | Â Sl47 | Â Sl45 |
Shear force, (6 days aging), lb |    7.9 |    9.0 |  10.1 |
Tenderness, (6 days aging) | Â Â Â 4.9 | Â Â Â 4.7 | Â Â Â 4.1 |
Shear force, (18 days aging), lb |    6.4 |    7.3 |    8.4 |
Tenderness, (18 days aging) | Â Â Â 5.5 | Â Â Â 5.3 | Â Â Â 4.8 |
Â
1The complementary fraction of breed inheritance was Hereford.
2Steers had grazed native Great Plains pasture or had been fed a backgrounding diet in a dry lot; time of year not reported. Steers (11 or 12 months of age) were fed to 1 of 4 days-on-feed (84, 98, 112, or 126 days) in Eastern Colorado in 1994. Purebred Hereford were from temperate areas of the United States. Crossbred Brahman steers were from Texas and Mississippi.
3Adapted from Sherbeck et al. (1995).
Table 9. Intake and growth on feed of F1 steers
Â
Dry matter intake |
Metobolizable energy intake | Â | |||||||||
 |
N |
lb/d |
lb/(wt0.75 /d) |
Mcal/d |
kcal/(wt0.75 /d) |
Days on feed |
Initial wt, lb |
ADG, lb/d |
|||
Limit-fed | |||||||||||
Angus |
4 |
7.5 |
0.097 |
10.7 |
137 |
137 |
780 |
0.93 |
|||
Boran |
8 |
6.7 |
0.095 |
9.5 |
134 |
139 |
657 |
0.73 |
|||
Brahman |
8 |
7.0 |
0.097 |
9.9 |
137 |
140 |
690 |
0.66 |
|||
Hereford |
4 |
6.9 |
0.097 |
9.9 |
138 |
143 |
685 |
0.71 |
|||
Tuli |
8 |
6.8 |
0.099 |
9.7 |
141 |
138 |
666 |
0.44 |
|||
Ad libitum | |||||||||||
Angus |
4 |
18.1 |
0.204 |
25.8 |
290 |
137 |
796 |
2.87 |
|||
Boran |
8 |
12.7 |
0.164 |
18.1 |
233 |
139 |
637 |
2.25 |
|||
Brahman |
8 |
16.2 |
0.190 |
23.0 |
270 |
140 |
708 |
2.80 |
|||
Hereford |
4 |
16.7 |
0.197 |
23.7 |
280 |
143 |
717 |
2.78 |
|||
Tuli |
8 |
14.4 |
0.177 |
20.0 |
251 |
138 |
677 |
2.14 |
|||
Â
1Steers were out of MARC III (¾ British ¼ Continental) dams.
2Fed as calves through the winter in Nebraska.
3Adapted from Ferrell and Jenkins (1998).
Table 10. Carcass traits of F1 steers
Â
Initial slaughter group |
N |
Carcass wt, lb |
Ribeye area, in |
Fat thickness, in |
Yield grade |
Quality grade |
Angus |
4 |
434 |
9.0 |
0.16 |
2.0 |
12.5 |
Boran |
8 |
348 |
7.8 |
0.11 |
1.8 |
11.9 |
Brahman |
8 |
401 |
8.6 |
0.11 |
1.8 |
11.5 |
Hereford |
4 |
366 |
8.2 |
0.07 |
1.6 |
12.3 |
Tuli |
8 |
357 |
8.5 |
0.09 |
1.6 |
12.0 |
Limit-fed | ||||||
Angus |
4 |
520 |
8.9 |
0.09 |
2.1 |
14.0 |
Boran |
8 |
443 |
8.7 |
0.11 |
1.9 |
12.4 |
Brahman |
8 |
463 |
8.5 |
0.09 |
1.9 |
12.1 |
Hereford |
4 |
459 |
9.3 |
0.11 |
1.8 |
13.0 |
Tuli |
8 |
430 |
8.5 |
0.09 |
1.9 |
12.5 |
Ad libitum | ||||||
Angus |
4 |
710 |
11.3 |
0.56 |
3.6 |
16.0 |
Boran |
8 |
564 |
10.4 |
0.27 |
2.6 |
13.4 |
Brahman |
8 |
679 |
10.5 |
0.46 |
3.4 |
13.9 |
Hereford |
4 |
661 |
11.1 |
0.49 |
3.2 |
16.0 |
Tuli |
8 |
589 |
11.3 |
0.34 |
2.6 |
14.5 |
Â
1Steers were out of MARC III (¾ British ¼ Continental) dams.
2Fed as calves through the winter in Nebraska. Limit-fed steers were fed approximately 77 kcal ME/lb0.75
3Quality grade: Standardo = 11, Standard+ = 12, Select– = 13, Selecto = 14, Select+ = 15, Choice– = 16.
4Steers in the initial slaughter group were slaughtered after an adaptation period of 3 months. Steers in the other groups were slaughtered after 140 days on feed.
5Adapted from Ferrell and Jenkins (1998).
Table 11. Postweaning efficiency traits in steers and heifers with varying fractions of Brahman inheritance
Â
RFI group/fraction Brahman |
N |
Gain, lb |
Feed:Gain |
Intake, lb/day |
RFI |
High RFI |
|||||
1 |
21 |
154 |
11.24 |
24.1 |
2.24 |
¾ |
14 |
170 |
10.96 |
25.4 |
2.51 |
½ |
37 |
183 |
11.05 |
27.0 |
2.42 |
⅜ |
20 |
197 |
10.08 |
27.7 |
2.95 |
¼ |
22 |
208 |
 9.69 |
27.3 |
2.33 |
0 |
30 |
180 |
10.43 |
25.8 |
2.34 |
Medium RFI |
|||||
1 |
23 |
154 |
 9.53 |
18.9 |
-0.04 |
¾ |
27 |
207 |
 7.41 |
21.0 |
-0.16 |
½ |
44 |
208 |
 7.77 |
21.4 |
-0.13 |
⅜ |
63 |
228 |
 6.93 |
21.6 |
-0.11 |
¼ |
33 |
224 |
 7.16 |
21.9 |
-0.02 |
0 |
72 |
210 |
 7.36 |
20.8 |
-0.10 |
Low RFI |
|||||
1 |
47 |
156 |
 6.94 |
14.0 |
-2.21 |
¾ |
 8 |
191 |
 6.86 |
18.1 |
-1.35 |
½ |
34 |
186 |
 6.70 |
16.8 |
-1.92 |
⅜ |
24 |
211 |
 6.14 |
18.1 |
-1.58 |
¼ |
11 |
198 |
 6.49 |
17.2 |
-2.34 |
0 |
51 |
186 |
 6.81 |
16.8 |
-1.70 |
Â
1Calves were evaluated in a 70-day trial after 2 weeks of acclimation to procedures in a GrowSafe feeding system. Calves were an average of 8 months of age and had been weaned for approximately 1 month.
2After adjustment of intake for body weight and ADG (RFI = residual feed intake) during the test period (which was from November through early January), calves were ranked by intake from lowest to highest and divided into
low (RFI < overall mean – 1 standard deviation),
medium (overall mean – 1 standard deviation < RFI < overall mean + 1 standard deviation), and
high (RFI > overall mean + 1 standard deviation) groups.
3Adapted from Elzo et al. (2009).
Table 12. Sire breed averages for carcass traits of steers produced by crosses of Brahman, Angus, and Romosinuano
Â
Breed |
Brahman |
Angus |
Romosinuano |
Marbling score | 360 | 475 | 393 |
% Choice | Â 31 | Â 75 | Â 46 |
% Standard | Â 23 | Â Â Â 5 | Â 10 |
Shear force, lb | Â Â Â 9.7 | Â Â Â 8.6 | Â Â Â 9.3 |
Tenderness | Â Â Â 5.4 | Â Â Â 5.8 | Â Â Â 5.8 |
Connective tissue amount | Â Â Â 6.1 | Â Â Â 6.5 | Â Â Â 6.5 |
Â
1Steers were commercially slaughtered after averages of 101, 129, or 157 days on feed. All steers previously grazed wheat pasture for an average of 120 days through the winter in Oklahoma.
2Dam breed was also significant as a main effect for these traits and means were similar to these.
3Marbling score:Â Slight = 300 to 399; Small = 400 to 499.
4Tenderness scores and detectable amount of connective tissue evaluated by a trained panel using values from 1 (extremely tough; abundant amount) to 8 (extremely tender; none detected).
5Dam breed means were similar to the sire breed means.
6Adapted from Riley et al. (2012).
Table 13. Carcass traits of steers with different fractions of Brahman inheritance
Â
Fraction of Brahman inheritance |
0 |
¼ |
⅜ |
½ |
¾ |
1 |
N | 216 | 182 | 224 | 341 | 206 | 198 |
Carcass wt, lb | 713 | 753 | 751 | 793 | 756 | 719 |
Dressing percentage | Â 61.7 | Â 62.4 | Â 62.6 | Â 63.2 | Â 63.2 | Â 63.3 |
WBSF, lb | Â Â Â 7.6 | Â Â Â 7.9 | Â Â Â 8.1 | Â Â Â 8.3 | Â Â Â 8.7 | Â Â Â 9.2 |
Tenderness | Â Â Â 5.8 | Â Â Â 5.6 | Â Â Â 5.5 | Â Â Â 5.5 | Â Â Â 5.1 | Â Â Â 4.6 |
Connective tissue amount | Â Â Â 6.1 | Â Â Â 6 | Â Â Â 5.9 | Â Â Â 5.9 | Â Â Â 5.5 | Â Â Â 5.1 |
Marbling score | 446 | 420 | 407 | 394 | 367 | 341 |
Ribeye area, in2 | Â 12.6 | Â 12.9 | Â 12.8 | Â 13.2 | Â 12.6 | Â 12.0 |
Fat thickness, in | Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â 0.51 | Â Â Â 0.43 | Â Â Â 0.35 |
Â
1Fractions of Brahman inheritance reported here are categories—actual fractions were ranges. The complementary fraction was Angus.
2From 1989 to 1995 steers were fed in a South Texas feedyard. From 2006 to 2009 they were contract fed in North Florida. Steers were fed as calves through the winter to a target of 0.5 inch backfat and slaughtered commercially in South Texas.
3Detectable amount of connective tissue and tenderness scores evaluated by a trained panel using values from 1 (extremely tough; abundant amount) to 6 (none detected) or 8 (extremely tender).
4Marbling score: Â Slight = 300 to 399; Small = 400 to 499.
5Adapted from Elzo et al. (2012).
Breeding Drought (Heat) Tolerant Cattle
by Joe C. Paschal
In early August I received a request from the Texas A&M University Department of Animal Science to field some requests for telephone interviews from some radio stations about breeding drought tolerant cattle. One was in San Antonio and the others were regional NPR and CBS affiliates. I had read in the local paper that morning an Associated Press news article out of Des Moines, Iowa entitled “Animals, plants being bred to withstand heat†and there pictured on the front page was my boss, Dr. Ron Gill, looking over his herd of cattle in Wise County, near Boyd, Texas! The article reported on cattle being bred to withstand drought by adding genes from their African (and Indian) cousins who are accustomed to hot weather. It reported that Dr. Gill had incorporated some Beefmaster into his herd and is experimenting with Hotlanders™, a composite developed by the R. A. Brown Ranch in Throckmorton in the 1980s. The Hotlander™ includes Angus/Red Angus, Brahman, Simmental and Senepol (a breed created in the Virgin Islands from crosses of Red Poll from England and N’Dama cattle from Senegal in West Africa almost 200 years ago).
Being an astute guy I put two and two together and realized that the radio interviews were going to be about our breeding drought tolerant cattle, the long history of that in the southern US and, knowing something about Beefmasters (and Hotlanders™ and Senepols), I started making the phone calls. All of those called were polite and the interviews went well (I never heard any on my radio but Dr. Tommy Perkins of Beefmaster Breeders United said the one he listened to did) but it was obvious that all the interviewers were interested in two things – were the cattle researchers doing this because they thought the climate was changing and how were we modifying these cattle genetically? These questions were never asked directly but I could tell that since the article originated in Iowa and none of the stations had any idea of where Wise County was it was plain that they were wondering why hot climate adapted cattle would be being developed in Iowa. I also emphasized that a hot drought was very different than a cool one and that under no circumstances could any type of beef animal survive a drought unless it had something to eat and drink, no matter how “drought tolerant†it might be!
I started out each interview saying this wasn’t new, that ranchers in the southern US had been using hot climate (not necessarily drought) adapted cattle nearly a hundred years, and that many heat tolerant breeds had been developed within the last 80 years or so and were widely accepted and used in the area. No novel genetic procedures were used except crossbreeding with Bos indicus or Brahman and selection of the crosses for many generations. I also went on to discuss that these cattle, were not only hot climate adapted but had many other attributes to offer over non heat adapted breeds. In addition to being adapted and productive in hot climates these new breeds (Brahman, Santa Gertrudis, Beefmaster, Braford, Brangus, Red Brangus, Simbrah and their crosses) improved beef production across the southern US. The increase in beef production was due to increased resistance or tolerance of internal and external parasites, increased longevity, more durable teeth, higher fertility, improved maternal ability, and faster and more efficient growth of these breeds and crosses in those environments compared to the temperately adapted breeds originally used. Of course this required additional explanations of beef cattle breeding and genetics and the cause and effects of hybrid vigor and were necessary to make the interviewer understand these breeds (including the Hotlander™) were not genetically modified in the sense of the glowing mouse with the jellyfish gene but were carefully bred and selected over generations to provide nutritious beef.
There are a number of breeds around the world adapted to the tropics, the land area between the Tropic of Capricorn and the Tropic of Cancer (or maybe a little further north and south), which represents a significant portion of the Earth suitable for cattle production. These tropically adapted breeds can be divided into two types based on their origin: Bos indicus (probably the greatest number of breeds and the largest number of head) and Bos taurus (cattle in Africa of an intermediate type called “Sanga†and from breeds introduced from Great Britain or continental Europe). Sanga cattle are an intermediate humpless type that probably originated in northeastern Africa over 2,000 years ago and spread south and west. There are numerous African breeds that are included in the Sanga type including Tuli and Africander. Some Sanga cattle, like the Afrikaner, were used in the development of other breeds such as the Bonsmara which was created by Dr. Jan Bonsma in South Africa and is 5/8 Afrikaner and 3/16 Hereford and 3/16 Shorthorn. Some, but not all, of these different tropically adapted breeds have been evaluated by land grant research stations across the southern US and by the USDA Agriculture Research Service in Florida and in Nebraska. The reasons for the interest in these cattle have been primarily for their heat tolerance properties and to see if there are differences between these cattle and the heat tolerant breeds currently used in the US. In most cases the numbers of these cattle are very small and they are not widely used.
Since there were no cattle in the New World, all of the tropically adapted breeds of Central and South America were derived primarily from cattle brought from Spain or from Portugal. Some of the islands in the Caribbean (like the Virgin Islands) were colonized by other countries (like England or Denmark) at some point and their cattle (like the Senepol) influenced by cattle from their homelands. Spain colonized most of the central and South American countries except Brazil which was colonized by Portugal. Spanish cattle were Bos taurus in type and were not tropically adapted (although the Spanish plains can get pretty hot). Portugal had similar cattle but fewer of them, but Portugal also had colonies in India so many of the tropically adapted breeds (Nelore, Indu Brazil, Gyr, etc.), in Brazil owe their origins to the Bos indicus cattle from those Indian colonies. As a result, in Central and South American countries there are many indigenous breeds of tropically adapted cattle of Bos taurus origin as well as Bos indicus. In crossing tropically adapted breeds of Bos taurus origin with nontropically adapted Bos taurus breeds, there is very little or no heterosis or hybrid vigor since the breed origin genetics are too similar.
The main interest in these tropically adapted Bos taurus cattle from either the Western Hemisphere or Africa is to find genetics that convey tropical adaptation without a decline in carcass merit (muscling or cutability but especially high-end marbling) associated with the use of Bos indicus genetics. Most of these breeds are slightly better in crosses for marbling score (Low Select to High Select) but they give up a significant amount of preweaning and postweaning growth. In addition, the breeders of the American breeds of cattle in the US have been selecting their cattle for growth and carcass merit for many generations and most of these new (to the US) tropically adapted breeds have not. In most cases, like the Hotlander™, those breeds are probably best used in small percentages to convey some hot climate adaptability but used with a healthy dose of other breeds to improve growth and carcass merit.