| Literature DB >> 33756246 |
Sabine Conte1, Candido Pomar1, Diovani Paiano2, Yan Duan3, Pengfei Zhang4, Janie Lévesque5, Frederic Guay6, Nicolas Devillers1, Luigi Faucitano7.
Abstract
A total of 160 pigs, in groups of 8 pigs of mixed genders, were fed four finishing feeding strategies with the aim to reduce muscle glycolytic potential and improve meat quality. Pigs were fed a control diet (C; fat = 5.0%, ADF = 3.0%, NDF = 8.8%), a high-fat and high-fiber diet (HFF; fat = 11.2%, ADF = 9.1%, NDF = 19.5%), a blend of 50-50% C and HFF diets (fat = 8.2%, ADF = 6.7%, NDF = 14.2%) or the C diet and transferred to the HFF diet after a diet transition. Dietary treatments alone or in interaction with gender had no effect on pig growth performance, carcass quality traits, Longissimus and Semimembranosus muscle glycolytic potential and meat quality (P > 0.10). The inefficiency of the dietary treatments applied in this study may be due to the low ratio between fat and digestible carbohydrate in the diets combined with the mild pre-slaughter stress conditions pigs were exposed to. CrownEntities:
Keywords: Carcass quality; Feeding; Growth performance; Meat quality; Muscle glycolytic potential; Pigs
Year: 2021 PMID: 33756246 DOI: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2021.108484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Meat Sci ISSN: 0309-1740 Impact factor: 5.209