Agriculture Canada researchers sow seeds for optimal beef cattle eats - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 12:26 PM | Calgary | -10.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Agriculture Canada researchers sow seeds for optimal beef cattle eats

Scientists have come up with a blend of grass they say make the best feed for cattle and other livestock after conducting trials at an experimental farm in Amherst, N.S.

Scientists say they looked at 54 types of pastures and came up with the top 5 grass mixes

John Duynisveld, a beef research biologist at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, studied how different types of pastures influence the amount of back fat beef cattle gained. (Submitted by Avril Vollenhoven)

A group of Agricultureand Agri-FoodCanada researchers say they've come up with new blends of grass that could offer richer pastures for beef cattle.

Scientists spent the past five years studying how different types of fieldsaffect livestock at the Nappan Experimental Farm in Amherst, N.S.

They measured how much cattle grew and how much back fat they developed, compared to what they ate. After looking at54 different mixtures of grazing grass, theyidentified five top performers.

John Duynisveld, a beef research biologist, saidthe work showed different types of pastures can have a big influence on livestock and even extend how much of theyear cattle are able to feed outside.

"It can have an affect on how the animals grow and how quickly they'll grow and develop," he said. "It gives us a pasture that ismore resilient to changes in weather ... that will have some species [of grass] that will always be growing at different times of the year."

Reducing production costs

Agriculture Canada researchers say farmers can use their pastures as food longer if they choose combinations of grasses that grow at different times of the year. (John Duynisveld)

Over a period of several months, the researchers used ultrasound machines to measurehow much weight each cow put on. Duynisveldsaidthe goal was to have about three millimetres of back fat on the cattle.

ResearcherYousefPapadopoulos, who specializes in plant breeding, saidthey compared the growth numbers to the energy and proteinin the pastures.

The winning grass combinations include some alfalfa,birdsfoottrefoil, timothy andorchardgrass.

He saidthe ultimate goal is to offer farmers a pasture that will allow them to keep their cattle grass-fed, and avoid the additional expense of sendingcattle to a feedlot before slaughter.

He saidkeeping cattlein fields for longer can save farmers money in the long run.

"Any producer who is willing to reduce their production cost ...the data we have will help them do that," he said.

Quality, not just quantity

There's a science to creating the best pasture recipe, one that requires grass and legumes.Papadopouloslooked at what types worked best.

"Growing grass alone, getting a lot of tonnage per acre is important, but what's also important is getting good quality," said Papadopoulos.

On Saturday, Duynisveld and Papadopoulos presented the new mixtures to farmers at an open house in Amherst. About 50 people took part, with some farmers video-conferencing in from other parts of the Maritimes.

Duynisveldsaid farmers often plant "recommended varieties" designed to produce hay, but which are not as good forgrazing.

"They've been selected for a hay type of system where they're harvested two or three times a year and they don't have the pressure of animals grazing on them," he said.

Duynisveld and Papadopoulos saidwhile they studied beef cattle, the grasscombinations can also apply to sheep and dairy cattle.

The researchers saidtheyare still analyzing the results from 2015 and planto publish the research this year.