Farms.com Home   News

Prepare Cattle for Second Heat Wave

By Julie Harker and Linda Geist

The first heat wave of summer can have negative effects on Missouri cattle, but it’s the second heat wave causes the most damage, say University of Missouri Extension specialists.

MU Extension state specialist in veterinary toxicology and animal health Tim Evans says cattle may still be recovering from the first major heat event and be less resilient to future stresses.

MU Extension climatologist Zach Leasor says it is not just high temperatures that are concerning. “Environmental factors such as high overnight lows (over 70 degrees), minimal cloud cover, little air movement and high relative humidity compound heat stress in cattle and other animals,” Leasor says.

Also concerning are high dew points, he says. Dew point marks the temperature at which water turns into liquid droplets. The higher the dew point, the more moisture in the air and the more uncomfortable it becomes.

Animal scientists attribute potential damage from a second heat wave to four major causes:

• Cumulative heat load. Cattle rely on lower temperatures at night to rid themselves of accumulated heat. When nighttime temperatures remain high, cattle have a hard time recovering, and body heat continues to build.

• Reduced resilience. Long periods of heat weaken the animal’s ability to cope.

• Prolonged effects. Even after a heat wave ends, risk of cow mortality remains high for three days, according to research.

• Lowered THI (temperature-humidity index) threshold. Prolonged heat stress lowers cattle’s THI threshold, which increases risk of death. High humidity makes it hard for cattle to regulate their body temperatures.

Source : missouri.edu

Trending Video

What Does 20 MILLION Hogs a Year Look Like?

Video: What Does 20 MILLION Hogs a Year Look Like?


?? The Multi-Plant System Processing 20 Million Hogs Annually in the Midwest JBS USA operates multiple large-scale pork processing facilities across the Midwest, including major plants in Iowa, Minnesota, and Indiana. Combined, these facilities have the capacity to process approximately 20 million hogs annually.

Each plant operates high-speed automated slaughter systems capable of processing up to 20,000 head per day, followed by fabrication lines that break carcasses into primals, sub-primals, and case-ready retail products.

Hog procurement is coordinated through electronic marketing platforms that connect regional contract finishing operations and independent producers to plant demand schedules. This digital procurement system allows for steady supply flow and scheduling efficiency across multiple facilities.

Processing plants incorporate comprehensive food safety systems, including pathogen intervention technologies, rapid chilling processes, and integrated cold-chain management. USDA inspection is embedded throughout the harvest and fabrication stages to ensure regulatory compliance and product integrity. Finished pork products — from bulk primals to retail-ready packaged cuts — are distributed through coordinated logistics networks serving domestic and export markets.