Journal of Animal Science and Technology
Korean Society of Animal Science and Technology
Research Article

Divergent residual feed intake is associated with distinct fecal microbiota in early fattening Hanwoo steers

Cheolju Park1, Sang Yoon1, Min-Seok Kim1, Zhongtang Yu2, Tansol Park3, Minseok Kim1,2,*
161186, Korea.
243210, United States.
317546, Korea.
*Corresponding Author: Minseok Kim, Division of Animal Science, Chonnam National University, Gwangju 61186, Korea, Republic of. E-mail: mkim2276@jnu.ac.kr.

© Copyright 2026 Korean Society of Animal Science and Technology. This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Received: Mar 02, 2026; Revised: Mar 29, 2026; Accepted: Apr 09, 2026

Published Online: Apr 23, 2026

Abstract

This study compared the fecal microbiota of Hanwoo steers exhibiting divergent residual feed intake (RFI) during the early fattening stage. In total, 63 Hanwoo steers, aged 16 months and maintained under identical dietary and environmental conditions, were evaluated for RFI based on individual feed intake and growth performance. From this cohort, high-RFI (inefficient; n = 5) and low-RFI (efficient; n = 6) steers representing the extreme 10% of the RFI distribution were selected for fecal microbiota analysis. Fresh fecal samples were collected and subjected to metataxonomic analysis using the Illumina MiSeq platform and QIIME2. At the phylum level, no significant differences were observed between the two steer groups. However, at the genus level, the cellulolytic <italic>Cellulosilyticum </italic>exhibited a significantly higher abundance in the low-RFI group, suggesting enhanced hindgut cellulose degradation in more efficient animals. Alpha-diversity metrics displayed no significant differences between the two steer groups. Beta-diversity analysis based on unweighted UniFrac distance revealed significant differences in fecal microbiota structure between the two groups, whereas weighted UniFrac analysis showed no significant differences, suggesting that while the two steer groups shared dominant microbiota members, they had distinct low-abundance, phylogenetically distinct taxa. Functional predictions using PICRUSt2 revealed enrichment of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-2 type transport system in the low-RFI group, implying greater microbial potential for nutrient uptake and utilization. Collectively, these findings suggest that feed efficiency in Hanwoo steers during early fattening is associated with specific fecal microbial taxa and functional traits rather than differences in overall diversity or dominant taxa.

Keywords: Fecal microbiota; Feed efficiency; Hanwoo steers; Metataxonomic analysis; Residual feed intake