1. The effect of protein restriction during the growing period on carcass, meat and fat quality of heavy barrows and gilts
- Author
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Maria Angeles Latorre, J. A. Guada, and J. Suárez-Belloch
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Physicochemical Phenomenon ,Meat ,Chemical Phenomena ,Adipose Tissue, White ,Sus scrofa ,Subcutaneous Fat ,Biology ,Muscle Development ,Subcutaneous fat ,Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fatty acids.monounsaturated ,Diet, Protein-Restricted ,Food Quality ,Animals ,Humans ,Protein restriction ,Food science ,Crosses, Genetic ,Adiposity ,Mechanical Phenomena ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Dietary Fats ,Up-Regulation ,Spain ,Female ,Intramuscular fat ,Food quality ,Orchiectomy ,Food Science - Abstract
Nutritional strategies are being researched in pigs to increase fatness and then to improve quality of dry-cured products. A total of 160 Duroc × (Landrace × Large White) pigs, 50% barrows and 50% gilts, were used in a trial. During the growing period (73-118. d of age), four feeds were formulated with decreasing levels of crude protein (CP; 21.6, 17.7, 14.7 and 13.5%) to achieve 1.10, 0.91, 0.78 and 0.52% of total Lysine, respectively. From 118. d until slaughter, at 123. kg (183, 181, 178 or 192. d of age, respectively), a common diet was provided (17.7% CP and 0.91% Lysine). Barrows had fatter carcasses than gilts but intramuscular fat (IMF) proportion was similar for both. Dietary CP restriction promoted wider backfat depth and pork with higher IMF percentage which was more monounsaturated and less polyunsaturated. We conclude that CP restriction during the grower period improves desirable carcass and meat traits in barrows and gilts intended for dry-cured products.
- Published
- 2015