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2006; Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station contribution; no. 06-205-S; Report of progress (Kansas State University. Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service); 959; Beef; Gain; Feedlots
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Examining Cost Of Gain In Kansas Feedlots (2006), A. Babcock, R. Jones, Michael R. Langemeier
Examining Cost Of Gain In Kansas Feedlots (2006), A. Babcock, R. Jones, Michael R. Langemeier
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports
This study had three primary objectives: 1) to examine the effects that individual performance and ingredient price factors have on cost of gain; 2) to quantify the annual and/or seasonal trend in cost of gain in Kansas feedlots; and 3) to examine the difference in cost of gain between steers and heifers. For both steers and heifers, corn price was significant and positive, indicating that as the price of corn increases so does cost of gain. The price of hay, which is a feedstuff in the majority of feedlot diets, has a positive, but insignificant, effect on feeding cost of …