Semina: Ciências Agrárias (Nov 2018)

Carcass characteristics and tissue composition of the meat of feedlot lambs fed high-grain diets

  • Guilherme Meneghello Carvalho Bernardes,
  • Sérgio Carvalho,
  • Rafael Sanches Venturini,
  • William Soares Teixeira,
  • Juliano Henriques da Motta,
  • Luiza Ilha Borges,
  • Juliene da Silva Rosa,
  • André Cocco Pesamosca,
  • Vagner Lopes Mello,
  • Matheus Lehnhart de Moraes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5433/1679-0359.2018v39n6p2635
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. 6
pp. 2635 – 2644

Abstract

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This study aimed to evaluate the effect of using different high-grain diets on the carcass characteristics and tissue composition of the meat of feedlot-finished lambs. Thirty-two male castrated Texel lambs born from single births and weaned at approximately 50 days of age were allotted to treatments that consisted of different unprocessed grains, as follows: corn grain, white oat grain, black oat grain, or grain of rice in the husk. The animals were slaughtered upon reaching the pre-established slaughter weight of 32 kg, which corresponds to 60% of the mature weight of their mothers. Lambs fed the high-corn grain diet had higher weights and yields of hot and cold carcass and larger loin-eye areas than those finished in the feedlot receiving high-grain diets based on white oat, black oat, or rice in the husk. Additionally, they had a higher degree of fatness and a thicker subcutaneous fat layer at slaughter, which lead to decreased cooler shrink loss. The neck, shoulder, ribs, and leg cuts were heavier in lambs fed the high-corn grain diet. By contrast, these lambs had a lower proportion of leg, more rib, and higher meat fat content, which may be undesirable for the consumer market. The use of high-corn grain diets, in comparison with high-grain diets based on black oat, white oat, and rice in the husk, may be recommended for finishing lambs in the feedlot when they are slaughtered at similar weights.

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