By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Beef may be "what's for dinner," but that's because
producers growing cattle are putting a good product on the
market for consumers to enjoy. Mississippi's
beef cattle had a production value of about $190 million in
2003, and most of this is from small operations. To support
this industry in the state, the Mississippi State University
Extension Service created an educational certification
program for beef cattle producers and
veterinarians. Dr.
Terry Engelken, MSU College of Veterinary Medicine beef
production medicine specialist, heads the Beef Quality
Assurance Certification Program. The program is a
cooperative effort between MSU's Extension Service, College
of Veterinary Medicine and Department of Animal and Dairy
Science; Mississippi Cattlemen's Association; Mississippi
Farm Bureau; and the Mississippi Veterinary Medical
Association. "This
program emphasizes guidelines that will help producers avoid
quality defects in their product," Engelken said. Quality
defects reduce the selling price of cattle, lowering the
profits a producer receives for each head of cattle. The
quality assurance program is intended to train producers in
ways to improve their production processes on the farm to
avoid these discounts. "Poor
animal handling and poorly designed facilities will lead to
an increase in lame cattle and bruising, and lower prices,"
Engelken said. "Cows with a poor temperament have been shown
to injure themselves and the people who work with them more
often, and calves from these cows do not grow as quickly
during the feeding period as calves from calmer
cows." The
program encourages producers to treat physical defects
promptly, and castrate and dehorn calves before market to
avoid a discount at sale. Program participants are taught
the importance of record-keeping, following label
recommendations and dosages on medications and vaccinations,
and providing an economical nutrition program. "Working
with your local veterinarian to design a cost-effective herd
health program should improve reproductive efficiency and
profitability as well," Engelken said. Producers
also are encouraged to carefully select injection sites for
vaccinations. Judd Gentry, Panola County Extension director,
explained how administering an injection in a poorly chosen
site can reduce the selling price of beef cattle. "Give
injections in the neck, not in other areas of higher quality
meat," Gentry said. "When that animal is butchered, they'll
have to cut out a large piece of meat where that injection
was made." Gentry
said about 10 percent of his area's beef cattle producers
are certified in this program. While beef sold by these
producers does not bring a premium, it does improve the
quality of the beef sold. "The
result is supplying the industry with a higher quality
animal," Gentry said. When it
comes time to sell an animal, training offered through the
Beef Quality Assurance Program can help with that,
too. "The
biggest determinant of what price the cattle bring is how
they are marketed," Engelken said. He
cited an example of a group of about six Mississippi
producers who pool their cattle in truck-load lots and sell
them using satellite video to an audience of national
buyers. "This
method of selling allows these producers to capture added
value," Engelken said. "This group of producers always has a
documented animal heath program and written information for
the buyer on what vaccines and dewormers were used and when
they were given." Engelken
said some buyers appreciate having a health history of the
animals and now actually request it. To
complete the Beef Quality Assurance Certification Program,
producers must attend a training session, pass an open-book
test and agree to a series of best management practices
designed to improve the quality of their cattle. Those who
complete the training are given a numbered certificate
attesting to their level of training and commitment to
improved beef cattle production. Released:
April 1, 2004
Animal
Health
![]()
Program trains
better beef
cattle producers
Contact: Dr. Terry Engelken, (662) 325-1287
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:50
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm04/040401.html
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