Make more money with your livestock

It is pointless running any business if there is no commitment to achieving profits in a sustainable manner. Dr Michael Bradfield, CEO of both AgriBSA and Wagyu South Africa, highlighted the main profit drivers for livestock farmers to Lloyd Phillips.

Make more money with your livestock
Having a single breeding season allows a farmer to make the most of optimal stocking rates.
Photo: By FW Archive
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All livestock farmers should know exactly how many kilograms of meat, wool, milk or other animal product are produced per hectare per year on their farms, says Dr Michael Bradfield, CEO of both AgriBSA and Wagyu South Africa.

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This should never be a guess, but an accurate, up-to-date figure.

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A farmer also needs to know how much it costs to produce each kilogram of product, and the per-kilogram price received.

These figures should then be compared with those of other farmers producing the same products both locally and farther afield.

“You need to constantly benchmark the productivity, production costs and profitability of your livestock business against competitors,” stresses Bradfield.

“You should then strive to be as good as, or better than, the most productive, cost-effective and profitable of these other livestock farmers.”

A simple formula

In his many dealings with South African livestock farmers, Bradfield has discovered that few consistently utilise the simple, but crucial, formula for calculating the profitability of a livestock enterprise:

Price received – cost of production x total kilogram of product produced/ha = profit

This is unfortunate, he says, as the cost of production factor in this equation is controllable.

For example, improvements can be made to feed-to-growth efficiency, the genetic quality and overall composition of a herd or flock, and the production system.

“To become more efficient and therefore more profitable, a livestock farmer has to bring down the cost of production over time,” he says.

A livestock farmer can also improve the total kilograms produced per hectare by reducing operating expenses, increasing labour productivity, and improving infrastructure to make livestock handling and management more efficient.

Stocking rate

However, the most important factor in livestock production, according to Bradfield, is the stocking rate.

A farmer has to manage this for optimal production from optimal grazing utilisation.

“Stocking rate is eight times more important than animal fertility, which is four times more important than animal growth rate, which is twice as important as carcass size.

Stocking rate is your big profit driver.”

Having a single breeding season is the best way to make the most of an optimal stocking rate.

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The timing of the breeding season should be based on the production capabilities of the enterprise, as well as related costs.

For example, some livestock farmers can graze their animals on crop residue during winter. This boosts body condition far more cost-effectively than bought-in winter fodder.

In such a situation, it is feasible to have a winter calving/lambing season, as the females will recover body condition on the crop residue and are likely to achieve optimal weaning weights for their offspring.

“Remember, a lactating female has three times the energy requirements of a dry female,” explains Bradfield.

“At three to six months old, a calf or lamb needs all the milk its mother can produce. So feed availability and quality must be at its best during the calving/lambing season.

Adjust your livestock breeding season to fit in best with your farm’s production conditions.”

For a livestock enterprise with no access to crop residue during winter, the farmer should ensure that the calving/lambing season coincides with the time of year when other fodder sources, whether natural grazing, planted pastures or bought-in feed, are at peak availability and quality.

Lactating females will need this to produce enough milk for the best possible offspring weaning weights, and to recover body condition rapidly for reconception.

Meeting demand on time

Technologies such as Cryovac (vacuum-sealed) meat-packing give livestock farmers, meat processors and retailers greater flexibility to meet supply-and-demand peaks.

For example, many South African beef farmers wean their calves in May, and send them to the feedlot for finishing until October, yet peak demand for beef is during the festive season (December/January).

Vacuum packing
Technologies such as vacuum packing provide South Africa’s red meat value chain with greater flexibility to meet supply-and-demand peaks.

This means that feedlot-finished animals are ready two months or more ahead of schedule.

“Vacuum-packing technology enables processors to store meat safely in refrigerated conditions for up to 90 days before being sold to consumers,” he says.

“At the same time, the meat is aged for improved flavour and tenderness, which is prized by many red meat consumers.”

Therefore, he continues, livestock farmers should try to “align their breeding, calving/lambing, and weaning seasons to take advantage of higher prices offered for weaners ultimately intended for peak demand periods.”

Livestock farmers able to implement their ideal calving/lambing season could then identify the optimal stocking rate.

Weight: a key factor

A further profit driver is knowing the weight of all the animals.

“You should be weighing them to make sure they’re consistently gaining weight,” explains Bradfield.

“Weighing also enables you to set the median weight, which will allow you to identify good and poor performers, such as sick animals.

It will also allow you to send animals for slaughter at the correct time.”

Get up to date

An up-to-date recording system is also crucial; a modern farmer needs to spend time at a computer recording and analysing key production and cost data.

“Old-fashioned thinking should be left behind,” stresses Bradfield. “It’s already irrelevant and will definitely be in the future.

If you don’t have the tools to do the job or solve the problem to modern standards, get these as soon as possible, or you risk being left behind by your competitors.”

The equipment does not have to be brand new, he adds, “but it should be capable of the functions needed for modern farming”.

The necessity of annual calving

Another essential profit driver is to have mature breeding females that each calve or lamb every year. This requires strict selection.

Bradfield explains that Bos indicus cattle, for example, have evolved to survive under the toughest conditions.

Unfortunately, this means they have a propensity to calve later in life and exhibit lactation anoestrus (not coming on heat while suckling a calf).

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Producers of pure B. indicus or B. indicus-type cattle should therefore select replacement breeding stock only from those females that calve early and produce a calf annually.

If a mature breeding female still fails to calve or lamb every year, she should be culled immediately.

“The progeny of females able to produce even during drought conditions should be prioritised for retention as breeding replacements, because they’ve received hardy and adaptable genetics from their mothers,” explains Bradfield.

“Fertility is a trait with low heritability, but it is highly repeatable.

“You should also remember that it can take a new bull or ram on the farm only three generations for its genetics to be found in almost 90% of the farm’s entire herd or flock.

So it’s crucial that only top-quality breeding males are brought in.

“And if you keep having females that can’t produce a calf or lamb every year, be sure to check the sires too.”

Phone Dr Michael Bradfield on 012 667 5258, or email him at
[email protected]. Visit agribsa.co.za.

Dr Bradfield was addressing the annual series of regional meetings jointly hosted by the KwaZulu-Natal Red Meat Producers’ Organisation and the KwaZulu-Natal Wool Growers’ Association in February this year.

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Lloyd Phillips joined Farmer’s Weekly in January 2003 and is now a Senior Journalist with the publication. He spent most of his childhood on a Zululand sugarcane farm where he learned to speak fluent Zulu. After matriculating in 1993, Lloyd dreamed of working as a nature conservationist. Life’s vagaries, however, had different plans for him and Lloyd ended up sampling various jobs in South African agriculture before becoming a proud member of the Farmer’s Weekly team.