In animal husbandry, feed conversion ratio ( FCR) or feed conversion rate is a ratio or rate measuring of the efficiency with which the bodies of livestock convert animal feed into the desired output. For dairy cattle, for example, the output is milk, whereas in animals raised for meat (such as beef cows,Dan Shike, University of Illinois Beef Cattle Feed Efficiency pigs, chickens, and fish) the output is the flesh, that is, the body mass gained by the animal, represented either in the final mass of the animal or the mass of the animal slaughter output. FCR is the mass of the input divided by the output (thus mass of feed per mass of milk or meat). In some sectors, feed efficiency, which is the output divided by the input (i.e. the inverse of FCR), is used. These concepts are also closely related to efficiency of conversion of ingested foods (ECI).
FCR a function of the animal's geneticsArthur P.F. et al. 2014
As a rule of thumb, the daily FCR is low for young animals (when relative growth is large) and increases for older animals (when relative growth tends to level out). However FCR is a poor basis to use for selecting animals to improve genetics, as that results in larger animals that cost more to feed; instead residual feed intake (RFI) is used which is independent of size. RFI uses for output the difference between actual intake and predicted intake based on an animal's body weight, weight gain, and composition.Travis D. Maddock, Darren D. Henry, and G. Cliff Lamb. Animal Sciences Department, UF/IFAS Extension. AN217: The Economic Impact of Feed Efficiency in Beef Cattle Original publication date May 2009. Revised October 2015.
The outputs portion may be calculated based on weight gained, on the whole animal at sale, or on the dressed product; with milk it may be normalized for fat and protein content.
As for the inputs portion, although FCR is commonly calculated using feed dry mass, it is sometimes calculated on an as-fed wet mass basis, (or in the case of grains and oilseeds, sometimes on a wet mass basis at standard moisture content), with feed moisture resulting in higher ratios.
In the US, the price of milk is based on the protein and fat content, so the FCR is often calculated to take that into account.Tony Hall for Eastern Dairy Business September 2011 Define And Improve Your Herd’s Feed Conversion Ratio Using an FCR calculated just on the weight of protein and fat, an FCR of 13 was poor, and an FCR of 8 was very good.
Another method for dealing with pricing based on protein and fat, is using energy-corrected milk (ECM), which adds a factor to normalize assuming certain amounts of fat and protein in a final milk product; that formula is (0.327 x milk mass) + (12.95 x fat mass) + (7.2 x protein mass).Virginia Ishler for Progressive Dairyman. June 30, 2014 Calculating feed efficiency
In the dairy industry, feed efficiency (ECM/intake) is often used instead of FCR (intake/ECM); an FE less than 1.3 is considered problematic.Michael F. Hutjens August 21, 2012 Feed Efficiency and Its Impact on Feed Intake
FE based simply on the weight of milk is also used; an FE between 1.30 and 1.70 is normal.Robert C. Fry, Atlantic Dairy Management Services. Measuring Feed Efficiency Why & How on the Back of a Napkin
The FCR of pigs is greatest up to the period, when pigs weigh 220 pounds. During this period, their FCR is 3.5. Their FCR begins increasing gradually after this period. For instance, in the US , commercial pigs had FCR calculated using weight gain, of 3.46 for while they weighed between 240 and 250 pounds, 3.65 between 250 and 260 pounds, 3.87 between 260 and 270 lbs, and 4.09 between 280 and 270 lbs.David R. Stender, Iowa State University Extension. IPIC 25h. Swine Feed Efficiency: Influence of Market Weight 2012
Because FCR calculated on the basis of weight gained gets worse after pigs mature, as it takes more and more feed to drive growth, countries that have a culture of slaughtering pigs at very high weights, like Japan and Korea, have poor FCRs.
For hens used in egg production in the US, the FCR was about 2, with each hen laying about 330 eggs per year.Peter Best for WATTagnet.com November 24, 2011 Poultry performance improves over past decades When slaughtered, the world average layer flock as of 2013 yields a carcass FCR of 4.2, still much better than the average backyard chicken flock (FCR 9.2 for eggs, 14.6 for carcass).
From the early 1960s to 2011, in the US, broiler growth rates doubled and their FCRs halved, mostly due to improvements in genetics and rapid dissemination of the improved chickens. The improvement in genetics for growing meat created challenges for farmers who breed the chickens that are raised by the broiler industry, as the genetics that cause fast growth decreased reproductive abilities.Mississippi State University Extension Service Broiler Breeder Management Is No Easy Task, 2013
FIFO is a way of expressing the contribution from harvested wild fish used in aquafeed compared with the amount of edible farmed fish, as a ratio. The fish used in fishmeal and fish oil production are not used for human consumption, but with their use as fishmeal and fish oil in aquafeed they contribute to global food production.
Fishmeal and fish oil inclusion rates in aquafeeds have shown a continual decline over time as aquaculture grows and more feed is produced, but with a finite annual supply of fishmeal and fish oil. Calculations have shown that the overall fed aquaculture FIFO declined from 0.63 in 2000 to 0.33 in 2010, and 0.22 in 2015. In 2015, therefore, approximately 4.55 kg of farmed fish was produced for every 1 kg of wild fish harvested and used in feed. (For Salmon & Trout, the FIFO ratios for 2000, 2010, and 2015 are: 2.57, 1.38, 0.82.)
It is possible for fish to have an FCR below 1 despite obvious energy losses in feed-to-meat conversion. Fish feed tends to be dry food with higher energy density than water-rich fish flesh.
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Lessons Learnt from 25 Years of Feed Efficiency Research in Australia. Proceedings, 10th World Congress of Genetics Applied to Livestock Production. Abstract here [5] and age, the quality and ingredients of the feed, and the conditions in which the animal is kept,National Research Council (Subcommittee on Environmental Stress). 1981. Effect of environment on nutrient requirements of domestic animals. National Academy Press, Washington. 168 pp. and storage and use of the feed by the farmworkers.Dennis DiPietre for Pig 333. April 21, 2014 Feed Conversion Ratio: critically important but often misused
Conversion ratios for livestock
Beef cattle
in the US, an FCR calculated on live weight gain of 4.5–7.5 was in the normal range with an FCR above 6 being typical.Dan W. Shike, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Driftless Region Beef Conference 2013 [https://web.archive.org/web/20160616072736/http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1027&context=driftlessconference Beef Cattle Feed Efficiency] Divided by an average carcass yield of 62.2%, the typical carcass weight FCR is above 10. , FCRs had not changed much compared to other fields in the prior 30 years, especially compared to poultry which had improved feed efficiency by about 250% over the last 50 years.
Dairy cattle
Pigs
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Performance standards Last updated 28 September 2012
Sheep
Poultry
Carnivorous fish
farm-raised [[Atlantic salmon]] had a commodified feed supply with four main suppliers, and an FCR of around 1.FAO [https://www.fao.org/fishery/en/culturedspecies/salmo_salar/en Cultured Aquatic Species Information Programme: Salmo salar (Linnaeus, 1758)] 2004 [[Tilapia]] is about 1.5,Dennis P. DeLong, Thomas M. Losordo and James E. Rakocy Southern Regional Aquaculture Center [https://web.archive.org/web/20151106233121/http://www2.ca.uky.edu/wkrec/TilapiaTankCulture.pdf SRAC Publication No. 282: Tank Culture of Tilapia] June 2009 and farmed [[catfish]] had a FCR of about 1.
Herbivorous and omnivorous fish
Rabbits
Global averages by species and production systems
Feed conversion ratios of meat alternatives
Insects
Meat analogue
Cultured meat
See also
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