J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim Sci. 2006. 84:3118-3122. doi:10.2527/jas.2005-676
© 2006 American Society of Animal Science

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ANIMAL PRODUCTION

Effect of timing of feeding a high-concentrate diet on growth and attainment of puberty in early-weaned heifers1

C. L. Gasser2, E. J. Behlke3, D. E. Grum and M. L. Day4

Department of Animal Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus 43210

4 Corresponding author: day.5{at}osu.edu

Precocious puberty (<300 d of age) can be successfully induced in a majority of heifers with early weaning and continuous feeding of a high-concentrate diet. The objective of this experiment was to determine the relative effects of timing of feeding a high-concentrate diet on age at puberty in early-weaned heifers. Sixty crossbred Angus and Simmental heifer calves were weaned at 112 ± 2 d of age and 155 ± 3 kg of BW and were fed a receiving diet for 2 wk. Heifers were blocked by age and BW, and assigned randomly to receive a high-concentrate (60% corn; H) or control (30% corn; C) diet during phase 1 (mean age 126 to 196 d) and H or C during phase 2 (mean age 196 to 402 d), resulting in 4 treatments (HH, n = 15; HC, n = 15; CH, n = 15; and CC, n = 15). Blood samples were collected weekly beginning at a mean age of 175 d and assayed for progesterone concentration to determine age at puberty. After 56 d on the experimental diets, BW of heifers fed the H diet during phase 1 were greater (P < 0.05) than those of heifers fed the C diet (mean age of 182 d; treatment x mean age, P < 0.01). After 70 d on the new diets (mean age of 266 d), heifers fed the H diet during phase 2 reached heavier BW (P < 0.05) than heifers fed the C diet, when compared within phase 1 diet groups (HH > HC; CH > CC). Body weights in HC and CH treatments differed from a mean age of 169 through 238 d, after which BW did not differ between these treatments. The ADG over the entire experimental period was greatest for the HH treatment (1.2 ± 0.04 kg/d; P < 0.05), followed by the HC and CH treatments (1.0 ± 0.03 and 1.0 ± 0.02 kg/d, respectively), which were not different, and the CC treatment gained the least (0.7 ± 0.04 kg/d; P < 0.05). Precocious puberty occurred in 67, 47, 47, and 20% of heifers in the HH, HC, CH, and CC treatments, respectively (HH > CC; P < 0.05). Mean age at puberty for the HH and HC treatments (271 ± 17 and 283 ± 17 d of age, respectively) was earlier (P < 0.05) than for the CC treatment (331 ± 11 d of age). Age at puberty in the CH treatment (304 ± 13 d of age) was intermediate to and not different from the other treatments. Heifers fed the H diet during phase 1 attained puberty earlier (P < 0.05) than heifers fed the C diet during phase 1. In conclusion, increasing dietary energy intake in early-weaned heifers, through feeding a high-concentrate diet from 126 to 196 d of age, decreased age at puberty regardless of the diet fed after 196 d of age.

Key Words: early weaning • heifer • phase feeding • puberty




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A. J. Roberts, T. W. Geary, E. E. Grings, R. C. Waterman, and M. D. MacNeil
Reproductive performance of heifers offered ad libitum or restricted access to feed for a one hundred forty-day period after weaning
J Anim Sci, September 1, 2009; 87(9): 3043 - 3052.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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