1. Understanding the impact of sire lean meat yield breeding value on carcass composition, meat quality, nutrient and mineral content of Australian lamb
- Author
-
M. B. McDonagh, Viv F. Burnett, Ralph Behrendt, Matthew I. Knight, N.P. Linden, Alex Ball, and Kym L. Butler
- Subjects
Male ,Iron ,Color ,Breeding ,Biology ,Pasture ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,Nutrient ,Animal science ,Yield (wine) ,Animals ,Carcass composition ,Sheep, Domestic ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sire ,Australia ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040401 food science ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Red Meat ,Feedlot ,Body Composition ,Female ,Composition (visual arts) ,Intramuscular fat ,Shear Strength ,Food Science - Abstract
Advances in genomics and technology measuring body composition are now allowing sheep producers to select directly for increased lean meat yield (LMY) using Australian Sheep Breeding Values (ASBV). This experiment evaluated the impact of sire LMY ASBV on carcass composition, meat quality, nutrient and mineral content for lambs reared at pasture and finished in a feedlot. A 1% unit increase in sire LMY ASBV resulted in progeny that were leaner (0.8%) and had less fat (1.0%) on carcass. There was also a 0.2% reduction in the intramuscular fat content, a 3.2 N increase in meat toughness determined by shear force at day 5 ageing, a reduction in the redness of the fresh meat and a lower iron content. It is concluded that Australian sheep producers will need to incorporate ASBVs for other aspects of meat quality when selecting sires with increased LMY to avoid deterioration in meat quality, nutritional content of lamb and fresh meat colour.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF