The effects of feeding finishing pigs of two genders with a high fiber and high fat diet on muscle glycolytic potential at slaughter and meat quality

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%, A...

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Veröffentlicht in:Meat science 2021-07, Vol.177, p.108484-108484, Article 108484
Hauptverfasser: Conte, Sabine, Pomar, Candido, Paiano, Diovani, Duan, Yan, Zhang, Pengfei, Lévesque, Janie, Guay, Frederic, Devillers, Nicolas, Faucitano, Luigi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung: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. •High fiber and fat diets do not modify muscle metabolism and meat quality.•Gender does not influence the response of pigs to dietary treatments.•Diet composition and preslaughter stress biased the effects of the diets.
ISSN:0309-1740
1873-4138
DOI:10.1016/j.meatsci.2021.108484