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Big Cows and Big Questions

This article written by Dr. Reynold Bergen, BCRC Science Director, originally appeared in the December 2024 issue of Canadian Cattlemen magazine and is reprinted on BeefResearch.ca with permission of the publisher.

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August’s column talked about how genetic selection for growth rate and carcass merit has resulted in heavier carcasses with better marbling scores. New genetics get to the feeder and packer through the bulls that cow-calf producers buy from seedstock producers. These new genetics also leave fingerprints on the cow herd as they pass through. If you retain your own replacement heifers, 87.5% of the genetics in your cow herd result from the last three “generations” of herd bulls you’ve introduced.

changes in Canadian cow carcass weights over time

The same genes that make feeder cattle grow faster and larger also turn replacement heifers into larger cows. Canfax data shows that cow carcass weights have increased by 4.3 lbs per year since 1960. After correcting for dressing percentage (50.75%), these roughly equate to live weights of 945 lbs in 1960 and 1,450 lbs today. That’s a 53% increase. Canadian breed association genetic trends for mature weight point in the same direction, confirming that genetic change is contributing to this.

You may not have noticed your own cows gradually getting larger unless you measure and track cow weights, or if you only notice the size of the cull cow cheque but not the sale weights. But chances are, your cows have gotten bigger too.

The big question is, are big cows a problem?

Some contend that smaller cows are more efficient. They need less feed (so the same number of acres can pasture more cows) and wean calves that are a higher percentage of their body weight. In contrast, large cows need more feed and more pasture, and they wean calves that are smaller relative to cow size. Let’s take each of those in turn.

Trends in mature cow weight over time by breed

Feed requirements: Larger cows certainly need more fuel to maintain their weight and body condition than smaller cows. But, it’s not a 1:1 increase. On a pound-for-pound body weight basis, larger animals need proportionally less energy to maintain themselves than smaller animals. So, while today’s cows may weigh 53% more than the 1960 model, they only need 38% more feed energy. At the end of the day, the same feed and land resources that supported 100 cows in 1960 might support about 73 cows today. But the animal unit month (AUM) used to determine pasture stocking rates and carrying capacity is still based on a 1,000 lb animal. If your cows have gotten bigger, but you’re still pasturing the same number of cows per acre, they may be nutritionally shortchanged, unable to maintain body condition, rebreeding later or not at all, and dropping out of the herd sooner.

Weaning weights: Larger cows raise larger calves, but a 50% increase in cow weight doesn’t mean a 50% increase in weaning weight. If you still had 945 lb cows that weaned 410 lb calves (43% of cow weight) selling for $4.60/lb at today’s prices, their calf crop would generate $8,000 more revenue than 73 larger cows weaning 630 lb calves (also 43%) selling for $3.90/lb. The larger cows would have to wean 660 lb calves (46% of cow weight) to gross the same as the smaller cows. But if genetics, a late calving season or poor pasture conditions meant the 73 large cows only weaned 477 lb calves (33% of cow weight), they could gross $25,000 less than 100 smaller cows.

Are small cows better? Cows weaning a high percentage of their body weight aren’t necessarily more efficient. They probably milk very heavily. This significantly increases their feed requirements and makes it more difficult to maintain body condition, maintain a 365-day calving interval (or rebreed at all) and stay in the herd long enough to pay for their development costs.

Yesterday’s smaller cows did not guarantee reproductive success, either. Eugene Janzen studied this in 166 herds across western Canada in the fall of 1975 (Some observations on reproductive performance in beef cattle in Western Canada; PMC1789442). Pregnancy rates averaged 86% and ranged from below 60% to over 95%. In a smaller study of 15 herds around Vegreville, Alberta, the previous year, Eugene found pregnancy rates averaging 70% (Reproductive performance of beef cattle in northeastern Alberta; PMC1697146). Herds reporting 81-92% pregnancy rates had much better nutritional management than herds with 38-66% pregnancy rates.

Pasture and feed management need to meet the cow’s nutritional requirements, regardless of size. The most recent Canadian Cow-Calf Survey reported that pregnancy rates averaged 92.2% in Alberta (92.6% nationally) the fall of 2022, suggesting management is keeping pace with the nutritional demands of today’s larger cows.

Charolais cows eating hay

Bottom Line

Big cows aren’t necessarily bad, but they don’t work for everyone. If your cows are weaning healthy, good-sized calves, maintaining a 365-day calving interval and staying in the herd long enough to make a profit, they’re probably right-sized for your operation. If they’re coming back open before they’ve paid for themselves, they may be too large for your operation’s resources and management style to support.

So what does this mean… to you?

Identifying the ideal cow for your operation — and the bull buying decisions that will help you get or stay there — starts with good records. Good records are key to good management and culling decisions. Buying bulls can be complicated. All the numbers and EPDs and ratios and indexes lead some producers to throw up their hands and rely on their eyeballs. Looks (frame, capacity, conformation, udder) are important, but they only tell you so much — cows wear their efficiency genes on the inside. The BCRC has developed a genetic record keeping course that can help simplify and demystify the process. You can learn more at BeefResearch.ca.

The Beef Cattle Research Council is a not-for-profit industry organization funded by the Canadian Beef Cattle Check-Off. The BCRC partners with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, provincial beef industry groups and governments to advance research and technology transfer supporting the Canadian beef industry’s vision to be recognized as a preferred supplier of healthy, high-quality beef, cattle, and genetics. Learn more about the BCRC at www.beefresearch.ca.

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