Frontiers in Veterinary Science (Feb 2024)

Discriminant canonical analysis as a tool for genotype traceability testing based on turkey meat and carcass traits

  • José Ignacio Salgado Pardo,
  • Antonio González Ariza,
  • Antonio González Ariza,
  • Francisco Javier Navas González,
  • José Manuel León Jurado,
  • Esther Díaz Ruiz,
  • Juan Vicente Delgado Bermejo,
  • María Esperanza Camacho Vallejo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2024.1326519
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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The present study aims to develop a statistical tool for turkey breed traceability testing based on meat and carcass quality characteristics. To this end, a comprehensive meta-analysis was performed, collecting data from a total of 75 studies approaching meat and carcass attributes of 37 turkey strains and landraces since the late 1960s. A total of 22 meat and carcass traits were considered variables, grouped in the following clusters: carcass dressing traits, muscle fiber properties, pH, colorimetry, water-capacity traits, texture-related attributes, and nutritional composition of the meat. Once the multicollinearity analysis allowed the deletion of redundant variables, cold carcass weight, slaughter weight, muscle fiber diameter, sex-female, carcass/piece weight, meat redness, ashes, pH24, meat lightness, moisture, fat, and water-holding capacity showed explanatory properties in the discriminating analysis (p < 0.05). In addition, strong positive and negative correlations were found among those variables studied. Carcass traits were positively associated, particularly slaughter weight and cold carcass weight (+0.561). Among meat physical traits, pH showed positive correlations with drip loss (+0.490) and pH24 (+0.327), and water-holding capacity was positively associated with cholesterol (+0.434) and negatively associated with collagen (−0.398). According to nutritional traits, fat and ash showed a strong correlation (+0.595), and both were negatively associated with moisture (−0.375 and −0.498, respectively). Strong negative correlations were found as well between meat protein and fat (−0.460) and between collagen and cholesterol (−0.654). Finally, the Mahalanobis distance suggested a clustering pattern based on meat and carcass characteristics that report information about interbreeding and variety proximity. This study establishes a departure point in the development of a tool for breed traceability guaranteeing aimed at enhancing distinguished, local breed-based turkey meat.

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