Data Loading...

Nebraska Beef - May 2020

226 Views
107 Downloads
62.71 MB

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Copy link

DOWNLOAD PDF

REPORT DMCA

RECOMMEND FLIP-BOOKS

Beef 101 Brochure

Beef 101 Brochure T Dan’s Prize is proud to †‡Ž‹˜‡”–Š‡ϔ‹‡•–‹„‡‡ˆ to our customers. With ƒ›

Read online »

Nebraska Orthopaedic PT_Improving Balance

1sudoku.com n° 36953 - LevelHard http:

Read online »

Nebraska: Work Pain Free

NPTM. Also visit www.moveforwardpt.com

Read online »

Nebraska: Beat Arthritis Pain

1sudoku.com n° 329366 - Level Hard 6 7 9

Read online »

Nebraska 11x17_ UpperExtremityOrthotic

Nebraska 11x17_ UpperExtremityOrthotic NEBRASKA ORTHOPAEDIC NEWSLETTER Sept. 2020 ARE YOU IN NEED OF

Read online »

Nebraska 2017 Court Monitoring Report

Nebraska 2017 Court Monitoring Report 2017 MADD Nebraska Court Monitoring Briefing Introduction Stat

Read online »

Nebraska: Feel Better Without Neck Pain Quickly

Read online »

2022 Nebraska Health Plans Portfolio (IFB)

NEPlans22. Follow us on social media with the handle @Medica. Medica is a Qualified Health Plan issu

Read online »

Nebraska 11x17_Protecting Your Shoulders From Injury

holiday-roasted-vegetables-recipe

Read online »

Gems Publishing - May 2020

or just to express your appreciation that they are your patient. When each of you takes just five mi

Read online »

Nebraska Beef - May 2020

D1

SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020

THE NORTH PLATTE TELEGRAPH

D2 BEEF Disruption, quandaries during pandemic THE NORTH PLATTE TELEGRAPH SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020

Cattle producers face dilemmas over sale prices, cost of operation

grain will return. In the meantime, some pro- ducers are trying to figure out what to do with cattle that are at market weight, but the price they can get at the sale barn has fallen well below the prof- it point. If they hold onto the cattle, waiting for the market to improve, that adds expense and risk to their operations. Producers have to figure the cost of continuing to feed and maintain market-size an- imals, said Dr. Brian Vander Ley, a veterinary epidemiolo- gist for UNL stationed at Clay Center. In addition, if cattle be- come excessively heavy, they are at greater risk for heat-re- lated illnesses. They also are more likely to be injured on their way to market. On top of that, when they get to the sale barn they may demand a lower price compared with cattle at the ideal weight. “There are a couple of ways” to limit weight gain in mar- ket-ready cattle, said Dr. Galen Erickson, a UNL professor of ruminant nutrition, but “none of them are great.” “You can increase the for- age,” in their diet, and limit protein intake, “but forages are expensive per unit of feed value” and “they’ll still gain some” weight anyway. Another option is to limit to- tal feed amount, Erickson said, but “that [only] works fine if you have room for all the cat- tle to feed at once,” which is often not the case. Cattle who need the feed the least may get

By GEORGE HAWS For the North Platte Telegraph

Effects of the pandemic have hit beef producers hard. Many have been forced to change the way they feed and mar- ket their cattle, and trying to figure out how to keep their businesses going, given the negative market situation. “We didn’t anticipate the interruption in the supply chain,” said Kelly Heath, di- rector of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Institutional Animal Care Program, with the COVID-19 related closures of many pack- ing plants. Nebraska producers also didn’t anticipate the loss of a distiller’s grain, an inexpen- sive feed source that producers have grown to depend on, said Travis Mulliniks, the UNL range cow production special- ist based at the West Central Research and Extension Center in North Platte. Ethanol plants have idled be- cause the demand for the fuel additive plummeted along with the price of gasoline. Distillers grain is a byproduct of ethanol production. Maybe things will work out for the better soon, Heath said, and packing plants will return to full capacity. When that happens, hopefully pric- es will get better: Higher for producers and lower for con- sumers. Maybe the demand for ethanol will improve also, and the supply of distiller’s

Photo courtesy the Beef Checkoff Amid the pandemic, cattle producers are being forced to weigh the revenue of selling cattle at lower-than-normal prices at the sale auction vs. how much the cattle would cost the operation by keeping it until prices rise again.

“protein is not just protein,” Mulliniks said. Different pro- tein sources are composed of different combinations of ami- no acids and they are not all utilized in the same way in the cow’s digestive system. Therefore, feed formulation re- quires careful consideration of the animal’s needs, based on life stage and performance goals. This year’s challenges, Vander Ley said, may prompt some long-term changes in the way cattle are raised and fed. However, what long-term ad- justments are appropriate “is

the billion-dollar question,” and warrants careful consider- ation. Otherwise, “unintended consequences of changes are likely.” The whole situation is com- plicated, Erickson said, and university specialists are available to help producers consider options. “Now is the time for professional help,” rather than just trying to fig- ure everything out, he said. At the same time, “Our producers are innovative,” Heath said, and working with them may result in “solutions that we ha- ven’t even thought of.”

to the bunker ahead of the oth- ers. As a result, you end up “fully feeding the first group and not feeding the others at all.” The distiller’s grain short- age is another problem, and “it’s hard to mitigate that,” said Mulliniks. Distiller’s grain is high in protein. There are other sources of protein, such as soy- beans, alfalfa hay and corn gluten, but a number of factors come into play. They include cost per ton, local availability and trucking costs. A complicating factor is that

Science shows no need to eliminate beef from diet US continues to be a top world leader in cattle production

consumption of fossil fu- els. Not only does this >Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker