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Sire breed effect on beef longissimus mineral concentrations and their relationships with carcass and palatability traits

Authors :
James M. Reecy
Tommy L. Wheeler
Larry V. Cundiff
Donald C. Beitz
M. J. Schneider
Steven D. Shackelford
Richard G. Tait
Qing Duan
Source :
Meat Science. 106:25-30
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate sire breed effect on mineral concentration in beef longissimus thoracis (LT) and investigate the correlations between beef mineral concentrations and carcass and palatability traits. Steer progeny (N=246) from the Germplasm Evaluation project-Cycle VIII were used in this study. In addition to carcass traits, LT was evaluated for mineral concentrations, Warner-Bratzler shear force, and palatability traits. A mixed linear model estimated breed effects on mineral concentrations. No significant sire breed (P≥0.43) or dam breed (P≥0.20) effects were identified for mineral concentrations. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated among mineral concentrations, carcass, and sensory traits. Zinc concentration was positively correlated (P≤0.05) with total iron (r=0.14), heme iron (r=0.13), and magnesium (r=0.19). Significant (P0.05) correlations were identified between non-heme or heme iron and most traits in this study. Magnesium concentration was correlated with all carcass and palatability traits.

Details

ISSN :
03091740
Volume :
106
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Meat Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....50bea5e48e8593cad80ea1015b4f1480