Supplemental chromium for stressed and growing feeder calves
1992
Chang, X. | Mowat, D.N.
The effects of supplemental chromium (Cr) from high-Cr yeast were investigated with steer calves fed corn silage diet. One hundred eight Charolais-crossed calves, Weighing 245 kg after marketing and transport, were allotted to one of four treatments during the initial 28-d stress period: control, .4 ppm of Cr in the diet, long-acting injectable oxytetracycline (LAOTC), and Cr + LAOTC. Those fed Cr received 4 mg of Cr/d for the first 3 d sprinkled onto a small amount of hay over the silage. Chromium without LAOTC increased (P < .05) ADG by 30% (.61 vs .79 kg/d) and ADG/DMI by 27% (.123 vs .156). Oxytetracycline alone increased (P < .05) ADG by 30% and DMI by 15%. Chromium had no effect on morbidity. However, LAOTC tended (P < .14) to reduce morbidity 26.0 vs 14.0%) after its administration. After d 28, steers were weeks later, they were rerandomized within Cr groups to urea-corn vs soybean meal supplementation of corn silage during a 70-d growing period. Level of Cr was reduced to .2 ppm. Jugular blood was collected from eight steers on each treatment on two occasions. Chromium had no effect on ADG or ADG/DMI. However, Cr decreased (P < .05) serum cortisol (75.0 vs 55.6 nmol/L). Furthermore, Cr increased (P < .05) serum immunoglobulin M and total immunoglobulins in calves fed diets with soybean meal but had no effect in calves with urea-corn supplementation. These results suggest that calves fed corn silage after market-transit stress may be deficient in Cr and supplemental Cr will decrease serum cortisol and improve immune response.
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