Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8503765 | The Professional Animal Scientist | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
To evaluate the effects of an injectable trace mineral (TM) on TM status and growth of feedlot steers raised in a Certified Angus Beef Natural system, 168 certified natural Angus steers (359 ± 36.6 kg), blocked by initial BW into pens of 6 head, received a sterilized saline (SAL, n = 84) or Multimin90 (ITM, n = 84) injection (1.47 mL/100 kg of BW). Steers were grown on a corn silage-based diet for 56 d and transitioned, and on d 84 they began a dry-rolled corn-based finishing diet. On d 84 steers were assigned equally within treatment, SAL or ITM, to receive a second injection, making 4 total treatments: (1) d 0 SAL, d 84 SAL (SAL/SAL, n = 42); (2) d 0 SAL, d 84 ITM (SAL/ITM, n = 40); (3) d 0 ITM, d 84 SAL (ITM/SAL, n = 40); and (4) d 0 ITM, d 84 ITM (ITM/ITM, n = 42). Liver Cu and Se concentrations were greater (P ⤠0.01), and liver Zn concentrations tended (P = 0.07) to be greater in ITM versus SAL steers on d 14. Liver Zn and Mn were not different on d 98 (P ⥠0.64). Liver Cu (P = 0.02) and Se (P < 0.001) concentrations were greater in SAL/ITM and ITM/ITM on d 98. Injectable TM had no effect on growing or finishing BW or G:F (P ⥠0.14). Steers had adequate TM status throughout the trial, likely explaining the lack of performance differences due to TM treatment.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
E.K. Niedermayer, O.N. Genther-Schroeder, D.D. PAS, S.L. Hansen,