£B-l_ancasfer Farming, Saturday, January 4,'20b3 New ‘Muscle Profiling’ Research Alms To Increase Cow Meat Value Cull Market Represents up to 25 Percent of Total Beef Production DENVER. Colo. Beef from fed cattle is frequently used dif ferently than beef from cull cows and bulls. That’s why the indus try, through the beef checkoff, re cently completed the “Cow Mus cle Profiling” project, a follow-up to successful muscle research on beef steers and heifers. The research catalog’s inform ation on potentially valuable cow muscles so that processors can make informed decisions and in crease the value throughout the cow beef production system. It is Testing For SCN Still Important Despite New Soybean Varieties WOOSTER, Ohio Though over 200 new soy bean varieties that resist soybean cyst nematode have been made available so far for the 2003 season, growers shouldn’t shirk monitoring SCN popula tions in their fields. Of the new resistant varieties, all but four origi nate from the same resistant source, painting a pic ture that tells Ohio State University plant patholo gist Anne Dorrance that eventually resistant varieties from PIBB7BB will no longer be effective against the pest. And, the amount of time it takes to identify and incorporate resistance genes from new sources of resistance, as well as breed a high yielding competitive soybean variety, increases the importance for growers to continue testing SCN populations despite the varieties they do plant. “The list of new varieties coming from PIBB7BB is telling us that growers need to be sampling their fields and monitoring SCN popu lations often to make sure that the source of re sistance they are planting is still working,” said Dorrance. “If the grower plants the same resis tant variety year after year, eventually the ne matode will adapt to it and the line will no long er be effective.” Dorrance said that the barrier between SCN and certain resistant soybean varieties is already crumbling in limited areas throughout Ohio, and will likely continue as SCN populations adapt to varieties that carry the PIBB7BB resistance. “I think what growers don’t understand is that resistance does not mean a complete resis tance. The way resistance is measured to soy bean cyst nematode is by how many females re produce compared to the susceptible check,” said Dorrance. “There will still be females reproducing on that resistant line, developing nematodes that eventually will develop an appetite for that par ticular resistant variety.” The best way for growers to determine wheth er they should plant a susceptible soybean vari ety, a resistant variety or plant a non-host crop is to test their soils for egg populations. “This may sound ludicrous, but growers should be planting susceptible soybean varieties if the populations are from zero to 40 eggs per cup of soil,” said Dorrance. “By selecting a susceptible variety, it-keeps the genetic pool in check so that all nematodes are competing with each other for food and no one nematode with a particular appetite for a specific source of resistance can dominate. Though PIBB7BB has been the mainstay of soybean cyst resistant lines for Ohio growers for the past decade, Dorrance said growers should be keeping their eye out for the development of October Pig Crop 2 Percent Below Year Ago WASHINGTON, D.C. The October 2002 U.S. pig crop at 8.33 million head, was 2 percent below the previous year, according to the Na tional Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). Sows farrowing during October totaled 940 thousand head, 2 percent below last year. The average pigs per litter for October increased to 8.86, compared to 8.85 last year. The U.S. inventory of sows and gilts on No vember 1, 2002, was 5.83 million head, down 2 percent from November 1, 2001. U.S. sows and gilts bred during October totaled 1.18 million head, down 1 percent from the previous year. The next “Quarterly Hogs and Pigs” report will be released at 3 p.m. ET on December 30, 2002. The next “Monthly Hogs and Pigs” report will be released at 3 p.m. ET on January 31, 2003. ' a culmination of more than two years of planning and projects coordinated on behalf of the Cat tlemen’s Beef Board and state beef councils by the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA). Today muscles from the cull cow and bull market which represents from 18 to 25 percent of total U.S. beef production are used for more than just the mid dle meats, according to the Na tional Market Cow and Bull Beef Quality Audit, also funded new lines that carry resistance, such as “Peking” and “Hartwig.” “Though we’ve got new varieties coming down the line, we are still very limited at this point as to what is available for growers in terms of different resistant lines,” said Dorrance. “That’s why it’s im portant to test fields for the presence of SCN. A grower does not want' to waste a good source of re sistance by overusing it. If this happens, it could mean losing the crop.” VISIT US AT THE KEYSTONE FARM SHOW - BUILDING E - BOOTH NO. D 659 GEHL ©Husqvama A Full Line Dealership With Sales, Service & Parts For A Wide Variety Of Farm Equipment, Lawn Equipment, Chain Saws & Trimmers through the beef checkoff. Cows represent more than 90 percent of this beef source. Beef from these animals is used to produce subprimals, lean beef and beef trimmings. These cuts go into both whole muscle cuts and further processed items. Yet until now little has been known about the muscles from these cuts, according to Bucky Gwartney, Ph.D., director of re search and technical services for NCBA. This new research, per formed at the University of Ne- (717) 235-0111 6877 Lineboro Road, Glen Rock, PA (800) 839-1992 YOUR FULL SERVICE DEALER FOR: WOODS braska and the University of Florida, characterizes the indi vidual muscles in market cows and helps differentiate their value in the beef carcass. More than 3,300 individual muscles were evaluated in the re search for traits such as shear force (for tenderness estimation), fat and moisture composition, di mensional data, color, pH, water holding capacity, collagen analy sis and heme-iron concentration. Sensory testing was also con ducted. Even though a large and high ly variable population was cho sen, the research found that mus cle traits varied across the population less than was ex pected. Muscle tenderness is one of the most important traits, and five of the 21 muscles were con sidered tender when evaluated by shear force testing. Three mus cles were moderately tender. In addition, many of the mus cles evaluated were considered lean, with less than 5 percent fat. The Food and Drug Administra tion (FDA) definition of “Lean” is less than 10 grams of fat, 4.5 grams or less of saturated fat and FARM & POWER EQUIPMENT lA, >4GCO f AGCO l UVG otta t * F,Ve ° ne Al New Idea I AGCO I BUILT FOB TMC BOTTOM LIBC 95 milligrams of cholesterol per 100 gram serving. “This kind of research will help us expand our utilization of the beef carcass,” said Bill Nice, a beef producer from Morrison, 111., and vice chairman of the indus try’s Joint Product Enhancement Subcommittee. “Cattle producers benefit from this effort as a result of the increased demand generat ed for more parts of the animal.” According to Gwartney, in formation from this research will be distributed to the market cow industry, and address possible market cow grading standards and ways to upgrade muscles that lend themselves to more value in the market cow chain. A manual has been developed, including all the summary data and relevant photos from the project. A CD-ROM containing the raw data, as well as other in formation such as fabrication videos and 3-dimensional views of the cow carcass and its cuts, is also being produced. For more in formation, contact the NCBA Research and Knowledge Man agement Department at 303/ 694-0305. O Simplicity