Animal Science, Department of

 

Nebraska Beef Cattle Reports

Date of this Version

2026

Citation

2026 Nebraska Beef Cattle Report, pages 52-55, MP-121, University of Nebraska Extension, 2026

Comments

Copyright 2026, Board of Regents, University of Nebraska. Used by permission

Abstract

Summary with Implications

Bunk management is crucial for modern feedlots, and understanding the ideal time to target a slick bunk is important. A feedlot study compared the effect of providing finishing cattle with 12, 15, 18, 21, or 24 hours of access to feed on performance, carcass characteristics, feeding behavior, and ruminal pH. As access time to feed increased, feed intake and day-to-day variation of feed intake increased linearly, while gain and feed conversion were unchanged. Cattle with greater access time to feed spent more time per day at the bunk, and consumed feed more slowly. A cubic effect on average ruminal pH was observed, with cattle that had 12 hours of feed access having the highest pH, and cattle that had 15 and 18 hours of feed access having the lowest pH. Reducing access time to feed maintained intake with no loss in gain if access was greater than 15 hours, but reduced feed access time did not improve feed conversion.

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