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Understanding and Managing Cattle Shrink

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Publication Number: P2577
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Cattle are typically marketed and transported several times in their lives. Marketing and transportation can be the most fatiguing and stressful events in a feeder calf’s life. Each move not only stresses calves and increases the risk of bovine respiratory disease and associated death, but also results in weight loss that must be regained after arrival. In addition, shipping cattle typically involves feed and water deprivation that contributes to weight loss.

This liveweight loss in cattle is commonly called shrink. Shrink can also refer to weight loss in carcasses or retail cuts. In addition to reduced liveweight and carcass yield, transport and handling stress can negatively impact meat quality.

Factors Affecting Shrink

Several factors impact shrink, including transit time, transit distance, environmental conditions (weather and transit conditions), cattle handling methods, and cattle management (including nutrition). The combined effects of shipping and handling result in greater weight loss than holding cattle off of feed and water alone. Transit shrink in beef steers represents up to two-thirds of the shrink from the combination of both fasting and transport.

Weight loss varies depending on the circumstances. A good rule of thumb is that about 0.75 percent of body weight will be lost per day with feed and water deprivation, and the weight loss will not necessarily be the same amount each day. When feed and water are unavailable, cattle shrink about 1 percent per hour for the first 3 to 4 hours and then roughly 0.25 percent per hour for the next 8 to 10 hours. Weight loss can increase dramatically when transport stress is added.

Longer feed and water deprivation and transit times lead to dehydration and higher shrink (Table 1). Recovery to pretransit weight takes at least 3 days and can take up to 30 days in severe situations. Typically it takes 1 week or less to regain weight lost from shrink. Emphasizing low-stress cattle handling and shipping in minimum time can benefit both buyer and seller by reducing shrink, stress, illness, and cost to regain lost weight.

Table 1. Handling condition effects on cattle shrinkage loss.

Handling conditions

Percent shrink

8-hour dry lot stand

3.3

16-hour dry lot stand

6.2

24-hour dry lot stand

6.6

8 hours in moving truck

5.5

16 hours in moving truck

7.9

24 hours in moving truck

8.9

Source: Alabama Cooperative Extension System. Alabama beef cattle pocket guide, ANR-1323.

Weanling calves of similar genetics can vary greatly in transit shrink percentages. Cattle with temperament problems may have higher levels of shrink. Preweaning management also affects pretransit weight. Lighter calves experience less percentage shrink than larger calves. Similarly, older cattle tend to lose more weight during transit and feed deprivation than younger cattle, but they also tend to regain lost weight faster.

The amount of fill can affect the degree of shrink. Lush grass, silage, and haylage diets usually produce more gut fill than hay or high-concentrate diets. Cattle shipped directly off of milk and grass may undergo a greater percentage shrink than cattle off of a preconditioning or hay and grain diet. In addition, calves shipped directly off of their dams must deal with weaning stress and possible unfamiliarity with feed bunks and water troughs.

Many producers attribute shrink to loss of gut fill alone. Although much of this weight loss is gut fill, feces, and urine that can easily be replaced, some is actual loss of fluid from body tissue. Fecal loss accounts for approximately 65 percent of the total weight lost, and urinary excretions account for about 28 percent of the weight lost. This leaves 7 percent weight loss from another source, likely body tissue fluids (from carcass components). Tissue loss takes longer to regain than weight loss from urine and feces. Because muscle contains more water than fat, higher levels of shrink are typically encountered in cattle with higher lean-to-fat ratios. Therefore, cattle frame size, age, sex, and body condition can impact the degree of shrink.

Managing Shrink

Management strategies to deal with transport stress and to reduce shrink include preconditioning programs, rest periods during and after transit, potassium supplementation, and the use of electrolyte solutions. Transported or feed- and water-deprived cattle are challenged with a mild metabolic acidosis, which may be the result of body water loss. Electrolyte solutions or water can help alleviate this dehydration and some stress in transported cattle.

Any added stress such as an overloaded truck, unfamiliarity with confinement, or extreme temperature and moisture conditions can increase shrink. Early-weaned calves maintained on-site before shipping might be more tolerant of the stressors associated with transportation and feedlot entry. Although there is no difference in shrink, there is a notable difference in recovery of lost weight. Early-weaned and preconditioned calves have an advantage over traditionally weaned calves in weight recovery.

Transportation shrink generally varies more between years than between preweaning management systems. This suggests that climatic conditions may be a major factor in body-weight loss for transported beef calves. Be familiar with weather forecasts, and avoid working or transporting cattle during extreme temperatures. Protect animals from weather during hauling.

Shrink can be managed by improving cattle handling conditions. Move slowly and quietly when handling and loading cattle. Avoid rough cattle handling. For cattle working, get help from people familiar to both the managers and cattle. Sort cattle at the ranch of origin. Avoid exposing cattle to strange environments such as new pastures, pens, or groups of cattle without first preconditioning them. Select cattle for improved temperament.

Do not overcrowd cattle in trailers. Group them into compartments to take pressure off end animals when the truck starts, turns, or stops. Avoid underloading trailers to reduce stress and bruising. Keep trips as short as possible. Prevent equipment breakdowns by maintaining scales, handling facilities, trucks, trailers, and other equipment. Allow cattle to rest during long hauls. Avoid transporting cattle on rough roads, and always provide them with good footing.

Provide feed and water to cattle when possible, and pay attention to their quality during rest stops and at the destination. Avoid stressful diet changes just before shipping, and be sure to allow free-choice access to grass hay. Withhold water 2 to 3 hours before shipping. Withhold grain, alfalfa, or clover hay at least 12 hours before shipping because these feedstuffs have a laxative effect on cattle. Precondition cattle coming off of lush forages or high-moisture feeds with a dry feed to limit scouring and excessive urination.

Economic Impacts of Shrink

Weight is an important factor in determining calf value. In order to determine fair market prices, buyers and sellers must account for shrink appropriately. Cattle buyers need to understand the costs involved with regaining lost weight. Shrink in feeder calves commonly falls within 2 percent to 8 percent of liveweight but can be higher under extreme conditions. Pen averages for shrink in the Mississippi Farm to Feedlot Project for cattle shipped from Mississippi to Kansas with a minimum 14-hour transit ranged from 5.59 percent to 8.71 percent. Slaughter steer shrink is also important. It often ranges from 2 percent to 6 percent and influences dressing percentage (the ratio of hot carcass weight to live weight).

Uncertainty in cattle weights adds to the challenge of determining a fair market price based on weight. Cattle are weighed at a single point in time, but what happens before or after the weights are recorded can vary. For instance, shrink differences can be expected if calves are given plenty of water and feed versus being held off of water and feed. Savvy buyers recognize “overfilled” cattle and discount them. Differences in water intake can be expected with different environmental conditions, as well.

An often-overlooked method for reducing the impact shrink has on the bottom line is to include it as a negotiating point when selling farm-fresh calves. Many board sales and private treaty contracts are based on a 2 percent to 4 percent pencil shrink. Pencil shrink is an estimated shrink used in many marketing transactions. It is a deduction from an animal’s weight to account primarily for fill. It is important to specify weighing conditions and times in the transaction to ensure fairness of the price. For instance, if calves will be transported to scales, that initial shrink will not be considered and could result in a reduced pay weight for the seller.

An example of factoring shrink into calf price is as follows:

When buying cattle, calculate a price that compensates for shrink. Suppose 600-pound calves sold for $1.05 per pound. The total value would be $630 per head. If the shrink was 4 percent (24 pounds in this case), then the delivered weight would be 576 pounds per head. The value of the weight delivered would be $630 ÷ 576 pounds = $1.09 per pound.

When selling cattle, calculate a net price after shrink allowance. If a 4 percent pencil shrink was imposed on this transaction, then the total amount received per head would be 576 pounds (delivered weight after shrink applied) × $1.05 per pound = $604.80 per head. Another way to calculate the total amount received per head is to decrease the price per pound by 4 percent and use the initial, preshrink weight: $1.05 per pound × .96 (to account for 4 percent shrink) = $1.01 per pound, $1.01 per pound × 600 pound per head = $606 per head.

Shrink is an inevitable yet manageable part of transporting cattle. Improvements in calf preconditioning programs, pretransit cattle management, cattle handling, shipping conditions, and management after arrival can help both cattle buyers and sellers. Understanding the factors affecting shrink can help producers and their customers make more informed marketing and purchasing decisions that more accurately and fairly account for shrink. The degree of actual shrink, how shrink is estimated and accounted for in marketing transactions, and how shrink impacts subsequent cattle performance and production costs ultimately influences net returns.

For more information on cattle shrink or related topics, contact your local MSU Extension office.

References

Alabama Cooperative Extension System. (2008). Alabama beef cattle pocket guide. ANR-1323. Auburn, AL.

Phillips, W. A., Holloway, J. W., & Coleman, S. W. (1991). Effect of pre- and postweaning management system on the performance on Brahman crossbred feeder calves. Journal of Animal Science, 69, 3102–3111.

Phillips, W. A., Juniewicz, P. E., & VonTungeln, D. L. (1991). The effect of fasting, transit plus fasting, and administration of adrenocorticotropic hormone on the source and amount of weight lost by feeder steers of different ages. Journal of Animal Science, 69, 2342–2348.

Schaefer, A. L., Jones, S. D., & Stanley, R. W. (1997). The use of electrolyte solutions for reducing transport stress. Journal of Animal Science, 75, 258–265.


Publication 2577 (POD-12-23)

Reviewed by Brandi Karisch, PhD, Associate Extension/Research Professor, Animal and Dairy Sciences. Written by Jane A. Parish, PhD, Professor and Head and Interim Head, North Mississippi Research and Extension Center, and Justin D. Rhinehart, PhD, former Assistant Extension Professor, Animal and Dairy Sciences.

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Authors

Portrait of Dr. Jane Parish
Professor and Head
Beef cattle
Portrait of Dr. Brandi Bourg Karisch
Assoc Extension/Research Prof
Beef Cattle, Nutrition, Management, Health

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