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Beef/Cattle Extension Program
Characteristics of the Major Beef Breeds
By Dr. Steve Hammack, Professor
and Extension Beef Cattle Specialist Emeritus Texas
Cooperative Extension
"...there
is now little if any difference between British
and Continental breeds in body size and rate of
gain." |
Beginning in the late 1960s, the USDA Meat Animal Research
Center at Clay, Nebraska, has evaluated around 30 breeds
of cattle in their Germ Plasm Project. Their latest
report (J. Animal Sci. 83:196) compared crossbred steers
sired by the seven Bos taurus breeds with the largest
number of registrations. These included three British
breeds: Angus (A), Hereford (H), and Red Angus (R);
and four Continentals: Charolais (C), Gelbvieh (G),
Limousin (L), and Simmental (S). All of these breeds
except R had been evaluated in earlier phases of the
project. Sires included a sample from among the top
50 in registrations within the breed as well as young,
unproven sires. There were from 20 to 23 sires per breed.
Traits were mathematically adjusted to slaughter end-
points of the same age (445 days), carcass weight (800
lb), fat thickness (0.43 in.), or marbling (Small35).
This paper and other recent reports by the U. S. Meat
Animal Research Center indicate that, compared to some
30 years ago and depending on slaughter end-point, there
is now little if any difference between British and
Continental breeds in body size and rate of gain.
However, in this latest work, important differences
still existed in body composition. Fed to the same age
or weight, Continentals tended to have less fat and
—regardless of end-point—larger ribeyes.
So, unless fed to the same fat thickness or marbling,
Continentals had superior yield grades. While the industry
often distinguishes between British and Continentals
when characterizing marbling and quality grade, in fact
Herefords were similar to Continentals, and Angus/Red
Angus were clearly superior in these traits. While there
were some statistically significant differences in eating
quality, these differences tended to be small and would
probably not be of much economic importance if beef
was marketed on actual palatability factors.
Traits are discussed in detail below. Where differences
or lack of differences are mentioned, they are based
on tests of statistical significance in the paper.
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Days on Feed - There was little
difference in days on feed to the same weight, breed-averages
ranging from 225 to 246 days. To reach the same
fat thickness, days on feed ranged from 206 to 277
and A, H, and R required fewer days. To the same
marbling, the range was from 190 to 279 days and
Hereford required almost as much feeding time as
the four Continentals.
-
Live Weight - At the same age,
breed-average live weights ranged from 1282 lb to
1362 lb: L were lighter than all but G and H; G
were lighter than A, C, and S; and A, C, L, R, and
S did not differ. At the same fat thickness average
weight ranged from 1258 lb to 1430 lb: the three
British breeds were lightest, Limousin were intermediate,
and C, G, and S were heaviest. But at the same marbling
(average weight ranging from 1199 lb to 1399 lb),
A and R were lightest, H intermediate, and the four
Continentals heaviest.
-
Fat Thickness - Slaughtered at
the same age or the same weight, the British breeds
were fatter, averaging 0.50 in to 0.57 in, while
Continentals had 0.30 in to 0.38 in. At the same
marbling, the range was from 0.38 in to 0.56 in:
all but L were leaner than H; R were leaner than
L; and there was no difference within A, C, G, and
S.
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Ribeye Area - Whether the end-point
was age, weight, fat thickness,
or marbling, the British breeds (12.2 to 12.8 sq
in) were smaller in ribeye than the Continentals
(13.4 to 14.0 sq in). Within British, A tended to
be larger and R smaller. Within Continentals, G
tended to be smaller and Limousin larger. However,
differences were small within the two types.
-
Yield Grade - Comparisons of Yield
Grade varied depending on the slaughter end-point.
At the same age or weight, British had numerically
higher (3.2 to 3.4), poorer YG, while Continentals
were lower (2.3 to 2.7). At the same fat thickness,
as might be expected, there were no differences
in YG. However, at the same marbling, H were higher
(3.5) than all other breeds (which ranged from 2.7
to 3.1).
-
Yield Grade Discounts - Yield
grades of 4.0 or higher receive meaningful price
discounts. At the same age or weight, British had
more 4.0 or higher (17 % to 21 %) compared to Continentals
(1 % to 7 %). But at the same marbling, H (23 %)
had more discounts than other breeds and differences
within the other six breeds were not significant,
but A (9 %) and R (7%) tended to be lower than the
Continentals, which ranged from 11 to 15%.
-
Marbling - At the same age, A
(Small84) and R (Sm90) had higher marbling than
the other breeds, which ranged from Sm04 to Sm27.
At the same weight, the same relationships held
with A at Sm66, R at Sm 83, and the other five ranging
from Sm03 to Sm24. But at the same fat thickness,
there was no difference among A, R, C, G, L and
S (Sm25 to Sm66), except that R were higher than
L; H (Sm05) were lower than all but L and G.
-
Percent Choice - At the same age
or weight A and R had higher percent Choice (81%
to 90%, depending on end-point) than H, C, G, L,
and S (which ranged from 57% to 66%). There was
no difference among the latter five breeds. But
at the same fat thickness, there was no difference
among A, R, C, G, L, and S, except that R (79%)
had more than L (65%); H (57%) had less than A,
R, C, and S (which ranged from 68% to 74%).
-
Shear Force - At the same age,
A, H, and R had less shear force (greater tenderness)
than G. At the same weight, R was lower than the
four Continentals and A and H were lower than G.
At the same fat, A, H, and R were lower than the
Continentals. At the same marbling, A and R were
lower than the other five breeds, and H were lower
than G.
-
Taste Panel - At the same age,
A and R were more tender than G. At the same weight,
A, H, R, and S were more tender than G. At the same
fat, A, H, and R were more tender than C and G.
At the same marbling, A and R were more tender than
C, G, and L. At the same age and weight, A and R
were juicier than C and G. But at the same fat or
marbling there were no differences among any of
the breeds in juiciness. And there were no differences
among the breeds in flavor intensity regardless
of slaughter end-point.
Beef:
Questions & Answers is a joint project between
MSU Extension and the Montana Beef Council. This column
informs producers about current consumer education,
promotion and research projects funded through the
$1 per head checkoff. For more information, contact
the Montana Beef Council at (406) 442-5111 or at beefcncl@mt.net
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