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. 1983 Jun;24(6):196–198.

Responses of Bulls to Copper Supplementation in a Record of Performance Test Station

G M Steacy, E D Janzen, B R Blakley, D A Christensen, H H Nicholson
PMCID: PMC1790367  PMID: 17422271

Abstract

A Hereford bull from a test station, routinely treated for footrot and not responding, was further examined at the Large Animal Clinic at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine. A slight arthropathy of the right shoulder was radiographically visible. The bull was found to have a marginally low plasma copper level of 0.52 ppm. All bulls in the test station were subsequently sampled for an initial plasma copper determination. At this time 76% of the bulls at the station had plasma copper levels below 0.50 ppm. A mineral mix containing 0.2% copper was added to provide 15 ppm copper in the final ration. All bulls were sampled 28 days later with less than 1% of the bulls showing plasma copper levels below 0.50 ppm.

Correlation coefficients between plasma copper levels and average daily gain were +0.067 for the presupplementation period, −0.255 for the supplementation period and −0.085 for the relationship between the change in plasma copper levels and the change in average daily gain. None of these correlations were significant (P > 0.05).

During the copper supplementation period plasma copper levels increased for all breeds of bulls studied. However, there was no concomitant improvement in rate of gain by the bulls.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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