Top Banner
Livestock 101 By: Kaila Wussow and Deanna Zernicke
14

Livestock 101

Mar 22, 2016

Download

Documents

sasha singh

Livestock 101. By: Kaila Wussow and Deanna Zernicke. Parts of a Beef. Parts of a Pig. Parts of a Sheep. C uts of Beef. C uts of Pig. C uts of Sheep. Q and A on Beef. What is the gestation period for a cow? -The gestation period for a cow is 9 months. When is a calf weaned? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Livestock 101

Livestock 101By: Kaila Wussow and Deanna

Zernicke

Page 2: Livestock 101

Parts of a Beef

Page 3: Livestock 101

Parts of a Pig

Page 4: Livestock 101

Parts of a Sheep

Page 5: Livestock 101

Cuts of Beef

Page 6: Livestock 101

Cuts of Pig

Page 7: Livestock 101

Cuts of Sheep

Page 8: Livestock 101

Q and A on Beef What is the gestation period for a cow?

-The gestation period for a cow is 9 months. When is a calf weaned?

-The calf is weaned at 6-8 months old. What is the mother called, what is the father

called, what is the baby called?-The mother is called a cow, the father is called a bull, the young baby is called a calf, a female that is 2 year old id a heifer, and a castrated male is a steer.

Page 9: Livestock 101

Q and A on Pigs What is the gestation period for a sow? -The gestation period of a sow is 114 days (3 months, 3 weeks and 3 days).

How many piglets can a sow have on average?

-A sow can give birth to a litter containing 7 to 12 piglets, about twice a year.

How much does a piglet weigh and how fast can it grow?

-A baby pig, or piglet, weighs about 1.5 kilograms at birth and will double its weight in just 7 days.

How many teeth does a mature pig have? -A mature pig has 44 teeth.

Page 10: Livestock 101

Q and A on Pigs continued… What is giving birth to baby pigs

called?-Giving birth to baby pigs is called farrowing.

When are pigs weaned?-Pigs are weaned when they are two to four weeks

old. What is the mother called? What is

the father called? -The mother is a sow, and the father is a boar.

Page 11: Livestock 101

Q and A on Sheep What is the life expectancy of a sheep?

-About 10-12 years What is the gestation period for a sheep?

-146-147 days

What is the average body temperature of a sheep?-102-103°F is the average body temperature of a sheep.

What are the mothers called? What are the fathers called? What are the babies called?-The mothers are called ewes, the fathers are called rams, the babies are called lamb, the 1 year old sheep are called yearlings, and a castrated lamb is called a weather.

Page 12: Livestock 101

Facts on the Beef Industry The U.S. beef industry is worth an estimated $175 billion

with cattlemen conducting business in all 50 states and operating 800,000 individual farms and ranches.

There are 1.4 million jobs attributed to the beef industry. America’s demand for beef has increased more than 15

percent since 1998.   Consumer beef spending has grown $14 billion compared

to the 1990s according to CattleFax.  The cattle industry is a family business. Eighty percent of

the cattle businesses have been in the same families for more than 25 years; 10 percent fore more than 100 years.

Page 13: Livestock 101

Facts on the Pig Industry Approximately 116.5 million hogs were

processed in the US in 2008. 23.4 billion pounds of pork were produced

in the US in 2008. US per capita consumption in 2008 was an

estimated 46.5 pounds, retail weight. The US is the world’s largest pork exporter,

with a 39 per cent market share in 2008. The US had 67.22 million hogs and pigs on

feed.

Page 14: Livestock 101

Facts on the Sheep Industry Australia is the second largest exporter of lamb and mutton after New

Zealand. New Zealand produced 56.7 per cent and Australia produced 36.7 per cent of the world's lamb, mutton and goat exports in 1998.

Australia is the world's largest exporter of live sheep, exporting around 5 million sheep in 1999, principally to countries in the Middle East.

The sheep industry produces many and varied products from lamb chops served in fine dining restaurants to lanolin. Estimates of retail lamb and wool, wholesale pelts, variety meats, meal, tallow lanolin, and retail sheep cheese sales revealed that $774.6 million in production generates an additional $1.9 billion in multiplier effects, summing to a total economic impact of $2.7 billion.

The U.S. sheep industry is finding itself amidst an encouraging time: lamb prices are at an all-time high, the wool market is the highest it’s been since 1989