Consider the Source: The Impact of Social Mixing on Drylot Housed Steer Behavior and Productivity

Social mixing, a critical component of contemporary beef cattle management, cancause psychosocial stress and typically occurs simultaneously with other stressors (e.g., weaning,transportation, etc.), leaving the independent impact of social mixing on cattle welfare unknown. Tobegin to disentangle this web, two different sources of genetically similar steers were either sociallymixed or housed with individuals from their source herds, and their productivity and behavior weremonitored.

Citation

related PUBLICATIONS

Measuring Adaptive Decision Making in Livestock Grazing Systems

May 6, 2026
Peer-Reviewed

Influence of First Calving Date on Stayability and Productivity in Bos Indicus-Bos Taurus Crossbred Cows

May 5, 2026
Peer-Reviewed

Lures Do Not Increase Box-Trapping Success of an Endangered Felid in South Texas

March 24, 2026
Peer-Reviewed

Techniques for Estimating Quail Abundance in Rangeland Vegetation

March 11, 2026
Peer-Reviewed

Measuring Adaptive Decision Making in Livestock Grazing Systems

March 6, 2026
Peer-Reviewed

Timing of Rainfall Influences Juvenile and Yearling Mass of a Long-Lived Herbivore in a Semiarid Environment

March 2, 2026
Peer-Reviewed