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Get Over The Hump

by Joe Mask | Published July 23, 2015

Original Article from The Progressive Farmer – July 2015

Story and Photos by Becky Mills

Brahman genetics add a lot of positives to a herd, but tenderness has not always been one of them. Times are changing.

Spend some time at the local sale barn, and you’ll figure out pretty quickly that a little ear is seen as a good reason to knock down the price for a feeder steer. This seems to hold true even in a market where buyers are all but fighting over calves.

If that doesn’t convince you there’s prejudice in cattle circles when it comes to Brahman blood, take a look at the specs for many branded beef programs. Brahman crosses are explicitly not welcome.

Do Brahman cattle really deserve the discounts? Or, has the newer generation of producers overcome quality challenges of the past?

THE FACTS. It is true a higher percentage of Brahman cattle are less likely to marble as well as Angus cattle, explains Dwain Johnson, University of Florida (UF) meat scientist. He adds the meat from these cattle is statistically less tender, and there is more variability in that tenderness.

Johnson and fellow UF researcher Mauricio Elzo reached these conclusions after feeding out and harvesting 1,367 head of Brahman, Angus and Brahman/Angus crosses from 1989 to 2009. However, the news was far from all bad for devotees to the Brahman breed.

Johnson explains they found there is a difference in tenderness, based on percentage of Brahman genetics in an animal. Less than 50% Brahman, and meat quality does not suffer significantly in either quality grade or tenderness. There is also a nice trade up on weights.

“In an F1 Brahman/Angus cross, there is a 60-pound increase in live weight over a straight Brahman or straight Angus calf. That weight gain and efficiency make up for most discounts you’ll likely get in today’s market. Bos indicus is a real positive,” he says.

ON THE GRID. Brothers George and Henry Kempfer give Johnson’s statement a strong “Amen.” These fifth-generation ranchers, from St. Cloud, Fla., have been retaining ownership on their family’s Brahman-sired steers since 1993. The brothers sell on a grid, where meat quality definitely matters. Their steers have graded as high as 79% Choice.

Dan Dorn has seen his share of feedlot cattle after working 18 years for Decatur County Feed Yard. He estimates he’s fed between 75 and 100 loads of Brahman-cross cattle at the Oberlin, Kan., facility. Every load was sold on the grid.

“I wouldn’t say the quality grades were much different. I don’t know if it was genetics or the weather, but their feed conversions were about a pound higher than average. With today’s corn prices, that would be a $50- to $60-a-head disadvantage.” These cattle, Dorn adds, were fed in the winter.

In their experience, the Kempfers say both feed efficiency and gain suffer when their half to three-quarter Brahman-cross steers are fed up north in the winter. However, George Kempfer says that in the spring and summer, the steers have gained 3.5 to 4.4 pounds a day and have shown a feed-conversion ratio of 5.4 to 1 (dry-matter-intake-to-gain ratio). In a south Texas feedyard, he says feed conversion dropped down to 4.9 to 1 on milo.

As they track their cattle, the Kempfers want more than feedlot or carcass data; they want to know where their cattle stand when it comes to tenderness. They have Warner-Bratzler shear force (WBS) tests performed on samples of their beef to measure tenderness. These tests indicated in the Kempfers’ case the majority of their beef was in the acceptable range. WBS values from 3.6 to 4.9 kilograms are acceptable; over 5.0 are considered tough. They have used this data to help them identify and cull those bulls siring calves with less than desirable tenderness.

A HIGH PERCENTAGE. Bill Pendergrass, executive vice president of Beefmaster Breeders United (BBU), says Texas A&M did a multiyear carcass study in the 1990s, and of the 300 head of Beefmaster-sired cattle, 72% graded Choice. Beefmaster is a breed developed in the early 1930s from Herefords, Shorthorns and Brahman.

As producers continue to pay attention to details and genetics, Brahman-cross cattle continue to get better. What they need is more recent, real-world data and proven genetics.

BBU is on it, Pendergrass says. “We are now involved in a progeny test of Beefmaster-sired calves. They are being fed in a Kansas feedlot. I’m confident the results will be even better than they were in the carcass study done in the 1990s.”

Beefmaster breeder Gary Frenzel says his family has been doing ultrasound measurements for 28 years on their animals. He’s seen definite improvement in critical areas during that time.

“Our rib-eye area (REA) has improved moderately. Our intramuscular fat (IMF) has increased dramatically,” reports the Temple, Texas, breeder. He says REA on bulls has gone from 1.1 or 1.25 square inches per cwt to 1.2 to 1.3 square inches per cwt.

He adds the IMF on heifers was 2.0 to 2.5 square inches per cwt but now is 2.5 to 4.0 square inches per cwt. The bulls aren’t quite that good, but his cattle are on grass, developed with no creep feed.

GENETIC MARKERS. Brahman and Brahman-composite breeders are looking for gene markers to aid in selection, too. Texas A&M Extension animal scientist Joe Paschal says Santa Gertrudis already have genomic-enhanced EPDs, and Brangus should have them soon.

Pendergrass says BBU is in the process of developing genetic markers, and they should be in place by late 2015.

Ditto with Brahmans. George Kempfer, vice president of the American Brahman Breeders Association (ABBA), and a member of the performance and breed improvement committee, says he is encouraged.

“The ABBA is working with Zoetis. We hope to have a genetic test next year. We’re a year and a half into it,” he reports.

The test, when available, will be similar to the GeneMax and HD50K tests offered to Angus and Angus-cross breeders. It will become possible to genetically predict how the offspring of a given animal will perform in the feedlot, as well as carcass characteristics and maternal traits.

George Kempfer adds: “We’ve seen a huge amount of interest from people who understand the importance of improving carcass quality and other production traits. There were times when there would only be a handful of people at the performance- and breed-improvement meetings. The last two committee meetings were standing-room only.”

Giving up Brahman genetics is not an option for any of these ranchers. George Kempfer says in his family’s southern environment, they have to keep Brahman in the maternal lines. Along with Florida’s heat, humidity, insects and parasites, he says their soils and forages are weaker.

“We can’t get performance without Brahman blood,” he stresses. “Crossbreeding is still a very important part of the beef industry. Hybrid vigor is for real.”

UF’s Johnson agrees. He says crossbreeds with Brahman blood are a good choice for producers who want to use a tropically adapted animal, or who have a low number of cattle and want to increase their output.

“The most heterosis you can get is crossing a Bos taurus [English or Continental breed] with Bos indicus,” he stresses.

Texas A&M’s Paschal points out, “It doubles the amount of heterosis. If a producer is only interested in marbling, I understand Brahmans are not going to grade like Angus. But the Brahmans of the 1980s are not the Brahmans of today. They have a lot of positive traits.

“Most commercial producers in the South are raising calves to sell at weaning. They can sure use Brahman genetics in that cow for environmental adaptability, maternal ability, maternal calving ease and longevity.”

The Kempfers are all about getting the best use they can from Brahman genetics, but they believe it’s important to cull hard. They cut cows and heifers for fertility problems, udder quality, calving ease and disposition.

“Every trait is magnified in crossbreeding,” George says, adding a for instance: “People have to know how to handle them. They scare easy.”

Henry says there’s still room for improvement. “We aren’t ashamed to admit there is more work to be done. We’ve taken on the challenge. With the low cattle numbers, what better time to prove to cattle buyers, feedyards and consumers that Brahman cattle are acceptable?” ⦁

Carcass Data Collection:

Time and time again, you’ve been urged to get individual carcass data on your cattle. It sounds simple enough. Identify your cattle with a traditional numbered ear tag or an electronic tag, and tell the feedlot manager you want carcass data when they are harvested.

There are times when that approach works and times when it doesn’t. Ask George and Henry Kempfer.

In the early ’90s, the St. Cloud, Fla., men had half-brother sire groups. Wanting to track performance, the Kempfer brothers tagged steers and sent them to a feedlot in the Texas panhandle.

Henry recalls: “We got a video of them, and the tags were out. George and I flew out there and retagged them. We had to do it by memory, but we knew our cattle and got most of them done.”

They were told they had to buy the loins out of the cattle if they wanted Warner-Bratzler shear force tests done for tenderness. The feeder followed the cattle to the plant and had the loins shipped to the Kempfers in Orlando. They picked up the meat and drove 100-plus miles to the meat lab at the University of Florida, Gainesville. They opened the boxes and found not one loin was identified.

Mix-ups happen no matter where and how you feed, but to raise your odds of getting individual carcass data, call your state cattleman’s association or Extension service. Several states have pasture-to-plate type programs where cattle from several producers are grouped together and sent to a feedlot for finishing, then to harvest. If your cattle are predominately one breed, your breed association may also have a feed-out program.

ANOTHER WAY. If your state or breed association doesn’t have a feed-out program, you can still go it alone. Contact the Tri-County Steer Carcass Futurity, headquartered in Lewis, Iowa. Under the direction of coordinator Darrell Busby, cattle are fed at cooperating feedlots, and individual feedlot and carcass data are collected and shared with the consignor, all for $10 a head.

You’re responsible for the trucking, which Busby says typically runs $30 to $60 a head, depending on the distance and weight of the cattle. Then, the Futurity buys your cattle for $5 a head. When the cattle are harvested, the feeding costs are subtracted from your final check. Busby says the cost of gain for 600 pounds is typically $420 to $470, depending on the price of corn.

There is no minimum on the number of head you can send, but he cautions against sending only one head.

“If you lose him, that’s a death loss of 100%,” Busby explains. He encourages producers to send at least five head. They accept cattle year-round.

He also says they have enough contacts nationwide to help you find a ride for your cattle. Still, if you have a state feed-out program, he encourages those new to the feeding process to go through it.

“It can be unnerving to send your cattle a thousand miles away and get a check for $5 a head.”

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