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Influence of Maternal Protein Restriction in Primiparous Beef Heifers during Mid- and/or Late-Gestation on Progeny Feedlot Performance and Carcass Characteristics.

Janna J BlockMegan J WebbKeith R UnderwoodMichael G GondaAdele A HartyRobin R SalversonRick N FunstonKenneth C OlsonAmanda D Blair
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2022)
This study investigated the impacts of metabolizable protein (MP) restriction in primiparous heifers during mid- and/or late-gestation on progeny performance and carcass characteristics. Heifers were allocated to 12 pens in a randomized complete block design. The factorial treatment structure included two stages of gestation (mid- and late-) and two levels of dietary protein (control (CON); ~101% of MP requirements and restricted (RES); ~80% of MP requirements). Half of the pens on each treatment were randomly reassigned to the other treatment at the end of mid-gestation. Progeny were finished in a GrowSafe feeding system and carcass measurements were collected. Gestation treatment x time interactions indicated that MP restriction negatively influenced heifer body weight (BW), body condition score, and longissimus muscle (LM) area ( p < 0.05), but not fat thickness ( p > 0.05). Treatment did not affect the feeding period, initial or final BW, dry matter intake, or average daily gain of progeny ( p > 0.05). The progeny of dams on the RES treatment in late gestation had a greater LM area ( p = 0.04), but not when adjusted on a hot carcass weight basis ( p > 0.10). Minimal differences in the animal performance and carcass characteristics suggest that the level of MP restriction imposed during mid- and late-gestation in this study did not have a significant developmental programming effect.
Keyphrases
  • preterm infants
  • body weight
  • adipose tissue
  • physical activity
  • skeletal muscle
  • body mass index
  • pregnant women
  • optical coherence tomography
  • binding protein
  • atomic force microscopy