Conference:Cattlemen's Day, 1990, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, February, 1990 Starting Page:53, Ending Page:55 Publisher:Kansas State University. Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service
Twenty-eight Hereford x Angus cows were utilized to determine the effects of dietary
energy level before and after calving on reproductive function and production in suckled beef
cows. Low levels of dietary energy before calving resulted in losses of body composition prior
to calving, reduced calf birth weight, lengthened intervals from calving to ovulation, and
decreased milk production and calf weight at 70 d of age (P<.05). Low levels of dietary energy
after calving decreased measures of body composition after calving, reduced the percentage of
cows that ovulated following calving, and decreased cow milk production and calf weight at 70
d of age (P< .05). We conclude that dietary energy before and after calving impacts the
reproductive function and production of suckled beef cows.