EFSA - European Food Safety Authority

07/25/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/25/2025 03:31

Common husbandry systems and practices for keeping beef cattle

Common husbandry systems and practices for keeping beef cattle

Published:
25 July 2025
Approved:
30 June 2025
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On request from
European Commission
Question number
EFSA-Q-2024-00127

Abstract

This Technical report, prepared at the request of the European Commission, describes common husbandry systems and practices for keeping beef cattle in the EU. It complements the EFSA Scientific opinion on the welfare of beef cattle, which was published separately. Using data from the scientific literature and information provided by EFSA stakeholders in an EFSA's Public Call for Evidence, it identifies the beef cattle categories of interest (suckler cows, suckler calves, heifers, fattening cattle, breeding bulls, and cull dairy cows), and describes main productive cycles, housing practices, and feeding strategies. Suckler cows raise calves until weaning (at 5-11 months), primarily in systems with pasture access. Spring calving is the most common practice, though autumn and non‐seasonal calving also occur. During winter, suckler herds are mainly kept in loose‐housing with open straw bedded pens and fed a forage‐based diet. Fully indoor and year‐round pasture systems are less frequent. Fattening cattle originate from both suckler and dairy herds, are fattened for 6-15 months and are slaughtered between 12 and 30 months of age. They are usually housed indoors on slatted or solid concrete floors with bedding, though in some cases they are given access to pasture or kept in outdoor feedlots. Their diet shifts from fibre‐ and protein‐rich feeds during the growing phase to energy‐rich feeds during finishing. Breeding bulls used for natural mating are usually kept in suckler systems with pasture access, whereas bulls used for artificial insemination (AI) are housed in AI stations. Cull dairy cows, when fattened before slaughter, are typically fed either indoors or on pasture. The welfare implications of these various husbandry systems and practices are further assessed for each animal category in the EFSA Scientific opinion on the welfare of beef cattle on farms, which was published separately.

This publication is linked to the scientific opinion "Welfare of beef cattle": https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.2903/j.efsa.2025.9518.

© European Food Safety Authority

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Animal welfare
EFSA - European Food Safety Authority published this content on July 25, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on July 25, 2025 at 09:31 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]