Abstract:
One hundred medium-framed, crossbred
steers (738 lb) were used to compare non-protein
nitrogen to natural protein supplementation
of finishing diets for implanted
steers. Diets were formulate d to contain 11.5
or 13.5% crude protein and were
supplemented with either urea or soybean
meal. A fifth treatment of cottonseed meal
supplementation (13.5% dietary crude
protein) was added to evaluate differences
between natural sources of rumen degradable
protein. Steers were implanted with
Revalor® and fed for 132 days. During the
first 70 days, daily gain and feed efficiency
were improved 8.8 and 6.1%, respectively,
for steers supplemented with soybean meal vs
urea. No difference was observed with
protein level. For the entire feeding period,
soybean meal increased dry matter intake
3.8% compared to urea. Protein source and
level interacted on daily gain. Increasing
dietary protein from 11.5 to 13.5% decreased
gain by urea-fed steers 8%, whereas
increasing dietary protein from 11.5 to 13.5%
increased gain 6.1% for steers supplemented
with soybean meal. Soybean meal improved
feed efficiency 7.6% compared to urea.
Protein level had no effect on feed efficiency.
Steers supplemented with soybean meal had
larger loineye areas than those supplemented
with urea. Carcass finish, percentage of carcasses
grading Choice, and yield grade were
not affected by treatment . Performance and
carcass traits of steers fed cottonseed meal
were similar to those of steers fed soybean
meal. We conclude that urea cannot meet the
metabolizable protein
needs of implanted finishing steers. Cottonseed
meal did not differ from soybean
meal as a protein source in this study.