Farms.com Home   News

Health, Performance of Dairy Beef to Be Featured at Feedlot Forum 2025

By Beth Doran

Dairy-beef crossbreds are gaining in popularity, yet some producers are unsure how that might work in their herds. Garland Dahlke, research scientist with the Iowa Beef Center, will present research he conducted the past 18 months examining the nutrition, health and performance of dairy crossbred calves. His presentation is one of five at Feedlot Forum 2025 on Jan. 14 in Sioux Center.

Beth Doran, Iowa State University extension beef specialist for northwest Iowa, said Dahlke was a member of an IBC team studying dairy crossbred calves from the wet calf stage through the finishing phase. The team monitored feed intake, body weight, sickness and carcass quality. The project was funded by state Check-Off funds from the Iowa Beef Industry Council.

“To reduce the upfront cost for feeder cattle, feedlot producers are purchasing dairy or dairy crossbred cattle," Doran said. "However, dairy crossbreds are not without challenges. These calves are more fragile and may require management differing from that used with calves of beef breeds.”

Dahlke is no stranger to dairy cattle, having grown up on a dairy farm in Wisconsin. He's been instrumental in developing software to formulate beef and dairy cattle diets, and is known nationally for his Feedlot Monitoring Program, Beef Ration and Nutrition Decisions (BRANDS) and the Estrus Synch software programs.

Registration for Feedlot Forum 2025 is available online at the conference website. Cost is $25 per adult and $10 per student. Registrations close Jan. 6.

Source : iastate.edu

Trending Video

CEOs of the Industry – International Edition Michael Agerley | Partner, IQinAbox

Video: CEOs of the Industry – International Edition Michael Agerley | Partner, IQinAbox

In this CEOs of the Industry – International Edition, we sit down with Michael Agerley, Partner at IQinAbox, to explore how data is reshaping the future of pig production.

After more than 20 years as a veterinarian, Michael shares his unique perspective on the shift from hands-on animal care to data-driven decision making across the pork value chain.

We dive into:

• How better data is improving real on-farm decisions

• The biggest opportunities still untapped in pig production

• How Europe is leading (and where it’s still lagging) in tech adoption

• The role of AI and smart systems in the next 5–10 years

• Why trust, leadership, and practical application matter more than ever

This conversation bridges veterinary insight, technology, and real-world farming, offering a clear look at where the industry is headed—and what it will take to get there.