Friday, August 12, 2011

Cattle Feedlots


Cattle feeding is concentrated in the Great Plains, but is also important in parts of the Corn Belt, Southwest, and Pacific Northwest. Cattle feedlots produce high-quality beef, grade Select or higher, by feeding grain and other concentrates for about 140 days. Depending on weight at placement, feeding conditions, and desired finish, the feeding period can be from 90 to as long as 300 days. Average gain is 2.5-4 pounds per day on about 6 pounds of dry-weight feed per pound of gain. While most of a calf's nutrient inputs until it is weaned are from grass, feedlot rations are generally 70 to 90 percent grain and protein concentrates.

Feedlots with less than 1,000 head of capacity comprise the vast majority of U.S. feedlots but market a relatively small share of fed cattle. In contrast, lots with 1,000 head or more of capacity comprise less than 5 percent of total feedlots but market 80-90 percent of fed cattle. Feedlots with 32,000 head or more of capacity market around 40 percent of fed cattle. The industry continues to shift toward a small number of very large specialized feedlots, which are increasingly vertically integrated with the cow-calf and processing sectors to produce high-quality fed beef. NASS provides monthly Cattle on Feed reports.

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