PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2073021
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2073021
According to Mordor Intelligence, the south america animal feed organic trace minerals market size is projected to grow from USD 102.4 million to USD 109.4 million in 2026 to USD 152.4 million by 2031, registering a CAGR of 6.86% during 2026 to 2031.

This report is Segmented by Trace Element Type (Zinc, Copper, Iron, and More), by Chelation Type (Amino-Acid Chelates, Proteinates, and More), by Animal Type (Poultry, Ruminants, and More), by Application (Growth Promotion, Disease Prevention, Immune Support, and More), and by Geography (Brazil, Argentina, and More). The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Brazil's 2024 export performance is pushing feed mills toward tighter mineral specifications in the South America animal feed organic trace minerals market. Chicken exports reached 5.3 million metric tons in 2024, and pork exports reached 1.4 million metric tons, with year-on-year growth of 3% and 10%, respectively, according to the Brazilian Animal Protein Association (ABPA). Large export destinations increasingly expect feed ingredient traceability, which favors labeled organic mineral sources over generic inorganic inputs in the South America animal feed organic trace minerals market. A September 2025 mini-review found that organically complexed zinc, copper, manganese, and iron in poultry and swine can reduce fecal mineral excretion, helping commercial systems respond to environmental compliance pressures in export-linked supply chains. This means the South America animal feed organic trace minerals market is gaining support from trade compliance needs, even when domestic feed costs remain volatile.
Beef herd intensification provides the South American organic trace minerals market for animal feed with a steady demand base that is less dependent on short-cycle price swings. Brazil's commercial cattle herd reached 194 million head in 2024, and feedlot confinement hit a record 8.8 million head in the same year. The same ABIEC report showed that confinement finishing accounted for 19.2% of total slaughters, while nutrition spending in Brazil's beef agro-industrial system reached USD 4,504 million. A 2025 Brazilian feedlot trial showed that organic trace minerals maintained animal performance even at lower inclusion rates, while improving average daily gain and feed efficiency in Nellore finishing bulls. The results reinforce the value of organic trace minerals through superior bioavailability and nutrient utilization compared with inorganic sources. This is supporting wider adoption among South American beef producers seeking greater production efficiency, optimized feed costs, and more effective correction of selenium, copper, and zinc deficiencies common in regions such as the Cerrado and Pampas.
Premium pricing remains the clearest adoption barrier in the South America animal feed organic trace minerals market. Organic formats still carry a visible cost gap against sulfates and oxides, and that gap is harder to defend in pasture systems where returns are less visible over short feeding cycles. The pressure is strongest in Argentina's value-led beef systems and in smaller swine operations that focus on immediate ration cost rather than downstream carcass quality. This has the side effect of favoring research-backed suppliers such as Zinpro, Novus International, Inc., and Alltech because producers who do upgrade tend to choose brands with published dose-response support. The South America animal feed organic trace minerals market consequently splits between advanced commercial users who convert fully and smaller operators who remain on inorganic programs.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Zinc accounted for the largest South America animal feed organic trace minerals market share, 35.6%, in 2025, making it the baseline trace element across poultry, swine, cattle, and aquaculture nutrition programs. Its role spans immune support, hoof strength, gut epithelial repair, and reproductive performance, so demand is broad rather than species-specific. Brazil's move toward more confined beef finishing also supports the use of zinc because tighter feeding systems require more consistent performance outcomes. A 2024 broiler study, "Synergistic Effects of Hydroxychloride and Organic Zinc on Performance, Carcass Characteristics, Liver and Tibia Mineral Profiles of Broiler Chickens," found that combinations of hydroxychloride and organic zinc improved feed conversion and reduced abdominal fat compared with zinc sulfate at equivalent inclusion levels.
Selenium is the fastest-growing trace element, projected to grow at a CAGR of 7.8% during the forecast period (2026-2031) because broiler, layer, breeder, and aquaculture programs increasingly value both bioavailability and support for food safety. A 2025 review in the Journal of Nutrition reported a 25% to 45% bioavailability advantage for organic selenomethionine and selenium yeast over sodium selenite at commercial dose levels. Copper, manganese, iron, and cobalt serve important but narrower functions, often tied to reproductive programs, skeletal health, or herd-specific correction of deficiencies. Chromium is still a small category, but it is gaining interest for stress-management applications in dairy cattle and aquaculture. The broader mix in the South America animal feed organic trace minerals industry also includes niche elements used in forage-deficient areas of the Cerrado and Pampas, where baseline mineral imbalance creates a direct supplementation need.
Proteinates held the largest share of the South America animal feed organic trace minerals market and accounted for 39.4% of the market in 2025. This dominance is attributed to their widespread commercial acceptance in feed formulations for beef, dairy, poultry, and swine. Their established role in performance-focused livestock nutrition programs, combined with proven bioavailability, mineral stability, and compatibility with commercial premix systems, supports their strong market penetration across the region. Proteinates are particularly prevalent in intensive production systems, where improvements in feed conversion, reproductive efficiency, immune performance, and overall animal productivity are critical factors for commercial feed manufacturers and integrated livestock operations.
Hydroxy trace minerals emerged as the fastest-growing chelation format in the South America animal feed organic trace minerals market, with a projected CAGR of 9.7% from 2026 to 2031. This growth is driven by the industry's increasing emphasis on mineral stability, feed efficiency, and enhanced nutrient utilization in intensive livestock production systems. Other chelation formats, such as amino acid chelates, selenium yeast complexes, and specialty mineral formulations, are gaining traction in premium animal nutrition applications. Meanwhile, emerging nano-mineral technologies remain in the early stages of commercialization within the South America animal feed organic trace minerals industry.