Estudios
I+D+I
Institución
Internacional
Vida Universitaria
Universidad de Zaragoza Repository
Search
Submit
Personalize
Your alerts
Your baskets
Your searches
Help
EN
/
ES
Home
>
Articles
> Tropical grass and legume pastures may alter lamb meat physical and chemical characteristics
Usage statistics
Plots
Tropical grass and legume pastures may alter lamb meat physical and chemical characteristics
Hampel, V.S.
;
Poli, C.H.E.C.
;
Joy, M.
;
Tontini, J.F.
;
Devincenzi, T.
;
Bertolín Pardos, J.R.
;
Macedo, R.E.F.
;
Nalério, E.N.
;
Saccol, A.G.F.
;
Rodrigues, E.
;
Manfroi, V.
;
Fajardo, N.M.
Resumen:
The present study assessed the influence of the type of the tropical pastures on lamb body weight (BW) gain and meat quality. Fifty-four lambs were allocated to three grazing pastures: (1) AG — Aruana grass (Panicum maximum cv. IZ-5); (2) PP — pigeon pea legume (Cajanus cajan cv. Anão); and (3) CS — contiguous swards, half of the paddock with AG and half with PP. After 92 days of grazing, the lambs were slaughtered. Carcasses were evaluated and the longissimus muscle was collected to determine color, lipid profile, tocopherol concentrations, and lipid oxidation. Although the pastures present differences in the characteristics of nutritional quality, the animals did not show difference in BW gain. The results show that all forage presented similar concentration of alpha-tocopherol (137 ± 14.37 mg kg-1 of fresh matter), whereas total and condensed tannin contents were greater in PP, intermediate in CS, and the lowest in AG treatment (P = 0.0001). Meat a-tocopherol content was similar among treatments (P = 0.1392), with an average concentration close to the optimal level to reduce the meat oxidation. Meat from AG treatment had 45 and 25% lower n-6/n-3 ratio than meat from PP and CS treatments, respectively. The legume increases the unsaturated fatty acids and the grass can reduce the n6/n3 ratio. The level of condensed tannin concentration did show to have important effect on meat characteristics. Both tropical pastures studied can provide a high amount of alpha-tocopherol, generating a great potential to increase the concentration of this antioxidant in lamb’s meat. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.
Idioma:
Inglés
DOI:
10.1007/s11250-021-02861-6
Año:
2021
Publicado en:
Tropical Animal Health and Production
53, 4 (2021), 427 [10 pp.]
ISSN:
0049-4747
Factor impacto JCR:
1.893 (2021)
Categ. JCR:
VETERINARY SCIENCES
rank: 53 / 145 = 0.366
(2021)
- Q2
- T2
Categ. JCR:
AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE
rank: 30 / 63 = 0.476
(2021)
- Q2
- T2
Factor impacto CITESCORE:
2.4 -
Veterinary
(Q2) -
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
(Q2)
Factor impacto SCIMAGO:
0.45 -
Food Animals
(Q2) -
Animal Science and Zoology
(Q2)
Tipo y forma:
Article (Published version)
All rights reserved by journal editor
Exportado de SIDERAL (2023-05-18-16:01:13)
Permalink:
Copy
Visitas y descargas
Este artículo se encuentra en las siguientes colecciones:
Articles
Back to search
Record created 2022-06-01, last modified 2023-05-19
Versión publicada:
PDF
Rate this document:
Rate this document:
1
2
3
4
5
(Not yet reviewed)
Add to personal basket
Export as
BibTeX
,
MARC
,
MARCXML
,
DC
,
EndNote
,
NLM
,
RefWorks