Journal article

Reducing dark-cutting in pasture-fed beef steers by high-energy supplementation

BW Knee, LJ Cummins, PJ Walker, GA Kearney, RD Warner

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2007

Abstract

Dark-cutting in muscles of the beef carcass is due to low muscle glycogen levels at slaughter and occurs particularly in autumn and winter in grass-fed cattle in southern Australia. The aim of these experiments was to investigate the effect of supplementary feeding of cattle grazing pasture during winter on muscle glycogen levels. The first experiment involved 70 cattle allocated to two stocking rates grazing improved perennial ryegrass and subterranean clover pastures [high stocking rate (HSR) v. low stocking rate (LSR)] by two pasture feeding regimes (control, pasture only v. pasture supplemented with a high-energy ration for 4 weeks) plus a feedlot treatment (fed high-energy ration in pen..

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University of Melbourne Researchers