Keeping Your Implant Strategy Simply Successful

(Sponsored Content)

Implant Strategies Don’t Have to Be Complex to Be Effective

Because management needs differ on each operation, finding a simple yet effective, implant program is key to getting the most return without overcomplicating the process and overwhelming yourself. The experts from Zoetis have broken down how to identify the right implant for a specific feeding situation to achieve the optimal response from the animal. Synovex Choice® is an excellent example of a flexible, all-around valuable implant in the marketplace.

Efficient performance comes from keeping it simple and appropriate for the stage of growth 

When choosing a cattle implant, take an approach that proves true in the feedyard and beyond: Keep it simple. 

Today's implant market contains so many options that trying to set up a simple program can be overwhelming. However, if the implant program is too complicated, it becomes impossible to administer in the feedyard properly.

“Implant strategy doesn’t have to be complex to get the most return,” said Gary Sides, Ph.D., Beef Strategic Technical Services, Zoetis. Dr. Sides advised sticking to a handful of basics when choosing an implant to meet your goals. 

The first step is to match the potency of the implant to the animal: 

  • Stage of production: suckling calf, stocker, feedlot (arrival/grow/finish) 
  • Energy availability of forage or feedlot ration 
  • Estimated days on feed 

Zoetis offers an implant finder to help match your answers to these questions with the appropriate implant because management needs differ throughout an animal’s development. As an example, Dr. Sides identified four different opportunities for using an implant as the animal grows from a 40-day-old calf nursing its mother to eventually moving on to its last 100-200 days in the feedyard.
 
“We can identify the right implant for a specific feeding situation throughout the implant potency staircase to achieve the optimal response from the animal,” Dr. Sides said. “As an example, use the lowest potency implant for a suckling calf and the highest potency implant for the last 80-100 days on a feedlot ration prior to slaughter,” Dr. Sides also said. 

“If you don't match the dose of an implant with an animal's age, weight, maturity and the energy density of the ration, then you may experience negative effects such as bullers or lower quality grade,” Dr. Sides said. 

The guiding principle throughout should be flexible simplicity, and it has led Dr. Sides to identify an implant that stands out for feedyards looking to manage efficiently. “I think Synovex Choice is a flexible, all-around valuable implant in the marketplace,” Dr. Sides said. “We also have long-duration implant technologies – Synovex® One Feedlot and Synovex One Grass– that offer 200-days of coverage to provide additional management flexibility.” 

Labeled for use in feedlot steers and heifers, Dr. Sides said Synovex Choice can be applied throughout a feedyard from five-weight calves to eight-weight steers—as an arrival or terminal implant based on market conditions and desired feedlot or carcass response. “Synovex Choice really simplifies things,” Dr. Sides said. 

Dr. Sides encourages feedyards with implanting questions to contact Zoetis support and technical service staff to discuss potential implant strategies using Synovex implants. 

Remember, there are no cookie-cutter answers to a feedyard’s needs. The Zoetis field force has a deep knowledge of beef markets and can apply that knowledge to make strategic recommendations. 

Visit NoStressSynovex.com to find the implant to fit your needs or visit with your veterinarian. Do not use SYNOVEX products in veal calves. Refer to label for complete directions for use, precautions and warnings. 

 

Sponsored by Zoetis
 

 

Tags

 

Latest News

Markets: Cash Cattle Rebound, Futures Notch Four-Week High
Markets: Cash Cattle Rebound, Futures Notch Four-Week High

After a mostly sluggish April, market-ready fed cattle saw a solid rally in the North and steady money in the South. Futures markets began to look past the psychologically bearish H5N1 virus news.

APHIS To Require Electronic Animal ID for Certain Cattle and Bison
APHIS To Require Electronic Animal ID for Certain Cattle and Bison

APHIS issued its final rule on animal ID that has been in place since 2013, switching from solely visual tags to tags that are both electronically and visually readable for certain classes of cattle moving interstate.

How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?
How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?

“If we step back and look at what that means for farmland, we're taking our energy production system from highly centralized production facilities and we have to distribute it,” says David Muth.

Ranchers Concerned Over Six Confirmed Wolf Kills in Colorado
Ranchers Concerned Over Six Confirmed Wolf Kills in Colorado

Six wolf depredations of cattle have been confirmed in Colorado from reintroduced wolves.

Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid
Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid

Cattle and hog feeders find dramatically lower feed costs compared to last year with higher live anumal sales prices. Beef packers continue to struggle with negative margins.

Applying the Soil Health Principles to Fit Your Operation
Applying the Soil Health Principles to Fit Your Operation

What’s your context? One of the 6 soil health principles we discuss in this week’s episode is knowing your context. What’s yours? What is your goal? What’s the reason you run cattle?