Researchers test technology to help producers monitor livestock feed (2014)

Researchers now have new technology to help gauge what healthy cattle eat and how farmers can limit their feed costs, which can be expensive.

24895003-bg1.jpg

Beef production is a half-billion dollar-a-year industry for Tennessee, and University of Tennessee agriculture researchers work to improve livestock production statewide.

Researchers now have new technology to help gauge what healthy cattle eat and how farmers can limit their feed costs, which can be expensive.

The new system sends information from the barn straight to a researcher’s desk.

A program called Growsafe at the UT Plateau AgResearch Center helps monitor cattle.

“We’ve traditionally been researching the area of reproduction and this is going to give us a huge push in the area of animal nutrition,” said Walt Hitch.

When cattle poke their head through the chute, the monitoring device starts recording.

“So when we put feed in, it knows how much we put it in and when we put it in. And then we know which animal ate and how much it ate. So it really has a lot of potential as far as the kinds of research. We can use different rations. We can look at feed efficiency,” said Hitch.

There are only about 100 of those units in the world and about 60 in the United States. The key advantage is the immediate and precise information for researchers.
They say the system lets them monitor a large herd at once.

Travis Mulliniks, the beef specialist for the Plateau AgResearch Center, can monitor the cattle from his desktop computer.

“The amount of feed we put in here, it actually records, sends it to a data acquisition panel that sends a signal up to my office that can record it. So, once a cow comes in with a EID in her ear, she sticks her head in to take a bite. I know exactly which cow is in there taking a bite from my office,” said Mulliniks.

He says the data gathered with GrowSafe will help producers with feed costs and management decisions.

To stay in business, farmers need cattle to eat well. The system gives them the information needed to raise a healthy heard.

This report is our land-grant partner, the University of Tennessee.

Related Stories
Sponsored
Matt Dolch with Syngenta discusses rootworm pressure, the latest trait technologies, and how corn growers can plan for 2027.
The thief pleaded guilty and received an eight-year sentence.
During World War II, Augusta National Golf Club temporarily became a working farm, raising cattle and turkeys and harvesting pecans to support the war effort.
“Cow goggles” are helping farmers experience cattle vision in real time, offering new tools to reduce stress, improve movement, and enhance livestock management.
CME Group Executive Director of Ag Research Fred Seamon discusses the recent rise in farmer sentiment highlighted in the March Ag Economy Barometer report.
Strong corn and China-driven demand support the pace of U.S. grain exports. RealAg Radio host Shaun Haney discusses Canada-China agricultural trade talks.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Corn Refiners Association VP Kristy Goodfellow offered insight into the Feeding the Economy Report’s key findings, showing the breadth of agriculture’s economic impact and the challenges ahead.
RealAg Radio’s Shaun Haney discusses Canada’s new soil health strategy, its implications for producers, and its potential to support sustainable agriculture in Canada compared to USDA funding for conservation.
National Association of Wheat Growers President Jamie Kress discusses how rising fertilizer prices pressure wheat producers and the Administration’s consideration of lowering duties on Moroccan phosphate.
Oklahoma Cattlemen’s Michael Kelsey joined us to discuss wildfire impacts across the Southern Plains, the importance of community support, and the path forward for affected producers.
RFA and ACE leaders join us to discuss the latest developments in ethanol policy, market impacts, and the path forward
ASFMRA’s Tony Toso joins us with an update on California farmland values, ongoing market uncertainty, and key discussions shaping agriculture in the Golden State.
Agriculture Shows
Hosted by Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady and RFD News Markets Specialist Tony St. James, Commodity Talk delivers expert insight into the day’s ag commodity markets just before the CME opens. Only on RFD-TV and Rural Radio SiriusXM Channel 147.
A look at the news, weather and commodities headlines that drove agriculture markets in the past week.
Everything profits from prairie. Soil, air, water — and all kinds of life! Learn how you can improve your land with prairie restoration, cover crops and prairie strips, while growing your bottom line.
Special 3-part series tells the story of the Claas family’s legacy, which changed agriculture forever.