Forage-Based Heifer Development Program for North Florida
side image of gopher tortoise opening its mouth. Figure 4 from  Wildlife of Florida Factsheet: Gopher Tortoise: WEC396/UW441, 8/2018
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Keywords

Forage
Grass
Heifer
Legume
Beef Cattle Forage

How to Cite

Dubeux, Jose C.B., Nicolas DiLorenzo, Kalyn Waters, and Jane C. Griffin. 2018. “Forage-Based Heifer Development Program for North Florida: SS-AGR-424 AG424, 10 2018”. EDIS 2018 (5). Gainesville, FL. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-ag424-2018.

Abstract

Florida has 915,000 beef cows and 125,000 replacement heifers (USDA, 2016). Developing these heifers so that they can become productive females in the cow herd is a tremendous investment in a cow/calf operation, an investment that takes several years to make a return. The good news is that there are options to develop heifers on forage-based programs with the possibility of reducing costs while simultaneously meeting performance targets required by the beef industry. Mild winters in Florida allows utilization of cool-season forages that can significantly enhance the performance of grazing heifers. During the warm-season, integration of forage legumes into grazing systems will provide additional nutrients to meet the performance required to develop a replacement heifer to become pregnant and enter the mature cow herd. In this document, we will propose a model for replacement heifer development, based on forage research performed in trials at the NFREC Marianna. 

 

https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-ag424-2018
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PDF-2018

References

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Schulmeister, T. M., M. Ruiz-Moreno, G. Medeiros, M. Garcia-Ascolani, F. M. Ciriaco, D. D. Henry, G. C. Lamb, J. C. B. Dubeux, Jr., and N. DiLorenzo. 2017. "Evaluation of Brassica carinata as a protein supplement for growing beef heifers." In 2017 Florida Beef Research Report. 107-110. Gainesville: University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. http://animal.ifas.ufl.edu/beef_extension/reports/2017/docs/2017_Florida_Beef_Research_Report.pdf

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