AMERICAN ANGUS ASSOCIATION - THE BUSINESS BREED

How Hair Shedding Scores Can Help Select Cattle for Heat Stress

Two new guides help producers visually select cattle with heat tolerance.

August 20, 2024

cows

by Julie Harker, University of Missouri

Selecting cattle with heat tolerance can improve a producer’s profitability. An updated University of Missouri (MU) Extension publication, “Hair Shedding Scores: A Tool To Select Heat Tolerant Cattle,” explains how to score for hair shedding and seek lower scores for better heat tolerance. The publication is available for download.

“Responsible beef breeding requires matching cattle genetics to the production environment,” says Jamie Courter, MU Extension state beef genetics specialist. “This is necessary for profitability, animal well-being and improved environmental impact. Cattle well-suited to their environment are more profitable. Not only are well-adapted cattle more productive, but they also require fewer inputs and interventions.”

One of the greatest environmental challenges for beef producers in many parts of the United States is heat stress, she notes. This is especially true in the Southeast, where humidity intensifies the high temperatures with which cattle must cope to remain comfortable and productive.

“Selecting cattle that appropriately cope with heat stress is a major piece of sustainable beef production.” — Jamie Courter

“Selecting cattle that appropriately cope with heat stress is a major piece of sustainable beef production,” she says. It is estimated that cattle suffering from fescue toxicosis and heat stress alone costs the beef industry more than a billion dollars a year.

The publication, based on research by Jared Decker, MU associate professor of animal sciences, details the tools available to breed cattle adapted to heat stress.

Two new MU Extension publications prepared by Courter provide more detail:

“The animal’s ability to sense the day length is having a big impact on shedding.”
— Jared Decker

“The animal’s ability to sense the day length is having a big impact on shedding,” Decker says. “We think there may be something to do with the eye, since that’s how mammals sense light.”

Research has discovered genetic associations between hair shedding and functions related to metabolism. It is anticipated hair shedding scores could be used in conjunction with body condition scores to assess the nutritional stress of the herd, Courter says.

“Therefore, hair shedding may also indicate an animal’s overall nutritional plane, thus helping to inform management decisions,” she says.

Later hair shedding (higher scores) indicates increased nutritional demands; this could be used to identify animals who would benefit from additional supplemental feed heading into spring and summer, Courter says.

This makes the hair-shedding tool important to cattle producers across the United States, she adds.

Hair-Shedding-Scores

From the MU Extension publication “Hair Shedding Scores: A Tool to Select Heat Tolerant Cattle.” [Photo by MU Extension.]

American Angus Association resources:

Angus University webinar

Hair Shedding Scoring Guide

Hair Shedding FAQ

Editor’s note: Julie Harker is a University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources Extension news strategist. [Lead photo by Shauna Hermel.]

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