|
Fine Tuning Mineral Management for Beef Cattle
By Dennis
B. Herd, Ph.D., professor and Extension beef specialist-nutrition

Mother cows frequently
don’t consume enough mineral supplement. Although composition of the
mineral supplement is important, lack of intake limits performance more
often than improper composition.
The recommended
composition for mineral supplements for several forage types are given
in Texas Cooperative Extension publication B-6056, “Mineral Supplements
for Beef Cows in Texas.” This publication is a good place to start
evaluating your mineral program.
It’s frustrating to
evaluate the mineral adequacy of grazing cattle. Free-choice mineral
consumption is variable and often nonexistent. When a protein-energy
supplement is being fed, supplemental minerals are best added to the
protein-energy supplement to make intake less variable and easier to
manage. Cattle commonly quit eating mineral supplements entirely when
protein-energy supplements are fed, especially when limited with salt.
Good pasture and hay
seldom require protein-energy supplementation. The only way to get all
needed minerals into the cattle is to provide a mineral supplement
free-choice in a mineral feeder. Although complete mineral supplements
can be purchased in block form for feeding on the ground, consumption is
often inadequate.
Cattle need mineral year
round, but it’s especially critical mineral intake is adequate during
the last 90 days of pregnancy and on through the breeding season.
Minerals have an important role in fetal development, colostral quality,
newborn calf vigor, immune function in cattle of all ages and rebreeding
of the cow.
Thus, it seems reasonable
to make sure mineral consumption is plentiful (two to six ounces), but
not excessive, for three months before and after calving. Then, continue
to supplement during the rest of the year, but don’t allow "luxury"
consumption, thus conserving mineral and money. Adequate body stores of
minerals will carry cattle through times of insufficient intake, but
this shouldn’t occur during critical times in the production cycle.
Add something they like to
the mineral mix to encourage consumption. Protein supplements like
cottonseed meal and soybean meal, ground corn, wet or dry molasses or
commercial salt and meal protein supplements can be added to get
adequate consumption.
Add five to 10 percent to
the mineral and increase as needed to obtain the desired intake.
Commercial manufacturers use particle size, prilling, coatings, oils,
byproduct feed additives, flavoring agents, etc. to manage mineral
consumption, but none of these techniques seem to work well in all
situations, thus the need for additional management by cattlemen.
Here are some points
cattlemen should be aware of regarding minerals.
Molasses Supplements Depress Copper Status
Two Florida studies by J.D. Arthington (Journal of Animal Science Volume
80:2787, 2002 and Volume 81:1357, 2003) documented molasses-based
supplements deplete liver copper stores in cattle.
In one study, molasses
supplements depressed copper status while corn supplements did not.
Molasses is normally high in sulfur (0.5 to 1.0 percent). Excessive
sulfur can reduce copper absorption and increase copper excretion, thus
decreasing copper status of cattle. Organic sources of copper were no
better than copper sulfate in maintaining copper status in these
studies.
Is the depressive effect
of molasses on copper status of practical importance? Possibly not, if
the supplement is only consumed for two or three months a year since
copper stores may be sufficiently increased while not consuming molasses
to carry cattle through a short depletion period.
If consuming molasses
supplements essentially year-round, the supplement should contain enough
copper to ensure the total diet contains more than 10 ppm (parts per
million) of copper on a dry matter basis (even more if known copper
antagonists are also present in forage).
Use Sulfur-Containing Fertilizers Wisely
Adequate sulfur is required for synthesis of sulfur-containing amino
acids, which serve as building blocks for forage protein. Excessive
sulfur, however, can depress the copper status of grazing cattle.
Hardt et.al. (Journal of
Animal Science 69:2310, 1991) reported two applications of ammonium
sulfate (supplying 95 pounds of sulfur per application) to winter
wheat/oat pastures near Beeville increased plant sulfur levels from 0.3
percent in control pastures to 0.5 to 0.7 percent in pastures receiving
sulfur.
Levels of sulfur around
0.2 percent are considered adequate for cattle, and 0.4 percent is
considered toxic though no signs of toxicity are commonly observed in
grazing cattle. However, Arthington et.al. (Journal of Animal Science
80:2507, 2002) documented 67 pounds of sulfur per acre from ammonium
sulfate increased sulfur levels in bahiagrass to 0.5 percent, as opposed
to 0.22 to 0.25 percent in pastures not receiving sulfur and decreased
liver copper status of cattle.
Though not statistically
significant, cattle grazing high-sulfur forage gained five percent
slower in the Hardt study and 15 percent slower in the Arthington
Florida study.
So, what’s the point? A
person needs to know copper and sulfur status of soil and forage before
using a fertilizer containing sulfur. Excessive sulfur would be expected
to be more detrimental to cattle performance if copper status in the
feed and animal are low and other copper antagonists in forage (such as
molybdenum, >2.5 ppm, and iron, >300 ppm) are high.
Adequate sulfur is
required for plant growth and digestibility. Plants low in sulfur are
often less digestible.
With sulfur, use a rifle
approach, not a shotgun! Analyze soil and forage to determine sulfur
levels. If they are low, fertilize with sulfur. However, if they are
adequate to high, you best not overdo it or cattle performance in the
areas of health, fertility, feed intake, digestion, and growth may be
depressed.
|