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The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This research explains how yellow lupin, potato protein, and brewer’s yeast in diets affect goose carcass and meat quality. The study showed no negative effect of yellow lupin on most traits, excluding leg muscle weight and content in carcass. Meat from geese fed with yellow lupin wa...

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Autores principales: Biesek, Jakub, Kuźniacka, Joanna, Banaszak, Mirosław, Adamski, Marek
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7070721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31991712
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020200
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author Biesek, Jakub
Kuźniacka, Joanna
Banaszak, Mirosław
Adamski, Marek
author_facet Biesek, Jakub
Kuźniacka, Joanna
Banaszak, Mirosław
Adamski, Marek
author_sort Biesek, Jakub
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This research explains how yellow lupin, potato protein, and brewer’s yeast in diets affect goose carcass and meat quality. The study showed no negative effect of yellow lupin on most traits, excluding leg muscle weight and content in carcass. Meat from geese fed with yellow lupin was characterized by better suitability for further technological processing, which was confirmed by the analysis of the ability to keep water in meat (drip loss). The results obtained show that the use of yellow lupin in diets for geese can be an alternative to soybean meal. Soybean is mainly a genetically modified material. Consumers expect non-genetically modified products. Yellow lupin as a protein source in geese diets gives wider possibilities and choices for the market, and it can support further studies. It has been shown that the use of yellow lupin in geese diets allows fattening by oats to continue, especially in small-scale family farms where feed produced from their own agricultural crops is often used. ABSTRACT: The aim of the study was to compare the carcass and meat quality of geese fed with soybean meal or yellow lupin. In total, 210 White Kołuda(®) geese were divided into 2 groups (1, soybean meal (SBM); 2, yellow lupin (YL), potato protein, and brewer’s yeast) of 5 replications (21 birds per each). After 16 weeks, 10 geese (5 females, 5 males) from each group were slaughtered. Carcass dissection was done, and major physicochemical traits were analysed (pH, water holding capacity, drip loss, color, and chemical composition of muscles). Weight of leg muscles and their proportion in the carcass were higher (p < 0.05) in SBM. Breast muscles from SBM were characterized by increased (p < 0.05) drip loss, enhanced (p < 0.05) content of protein, water, collagen and connective tissue, and lower (p < 0.05) fat content. Leg muscles from SBM were characterized by higher (p < 0.05) protein and water content but decreased (p < 0.05) salt and fat content compared to YL. The addition of YL (approx. 28%), potato protein, and brewer’s yeast had no negative effect on most meat traits and could partly replace SBM as a protein source in geese feeding. Hence, yellow lupin, potato protein and brewer’s yeast can be used in geese rearing followed by fattening with oats. Some producers do not have the option of using soybean meal. Small-scale farms use their own crop resources, so lupins can be an alternative source of protein for soybean meal.
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spelling pubmed-70707212020-03-19 The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal Biesek, Jakub Kuźniacka, Joanna Banaszak, Mirosław Adamski, Marek Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This research explains how yellow lupin, potato protein, and brewer’s yeast in diets affect goose carcass and meat quality. The study showed no negative effect of yellow lupin on most traits, excluding leg muscle weight and content in carcass. Meat from geese fed with yellow lupin was characterized by better suitability for further technological processing, which was confirmed by the analysis of the ability to keep water in meat (drip loss). The results obtained show that the use of yellow lupin in diets for geese can be an alternative to soybean meal. Soybean is mainly a genetically modified material. Consumers expect non-genetically modified products. Yellow lupin as a protein source in geese diets gives wider possibilities and choices for the market, and it can support further studies. It has been shown that the use of yellow lupin in geese diets allows fattening by oats to continue, especially in small-scale family farms where feed produced from their own agricultural crops is often used. ABSTRACT: The aim of the study was to compare the carcass and meat quality of geese fed with soybean meal or yellow lupin. In total, 210 White Kołuda(®) geese were divided into 2 groups (1, soybean meal (SBM); 2, yellow lupin (YL), potato protein, and brewer’s yeast) of 5 replications (21 birds per each). After 16 weeks, 10 geese (5 females, 5 males) from each group were slaughtered. Carcass dissection was done, and major physicochemical traits were analysed (pH, water holding capacity, drip loss, color, and chemical composition of muscles). Weight of leg muscles and their proportion in the carcass were higher (p < 0.05) in SBM. Breast muscles from SBM were characterized by increased (p < 0.05) drip loss, enhanced (p < 0.05) content of protein, water, collagen and connective tissue, and lower (p < 0.05) fat content. Leg muscles from SBM were characterized by higher (p < 0.05) protein and water content but decreased (p < 0.05) salt and fat content compared to YL. The addition of YL (approx. 28%), potato protein, and brewer’s yeast had no negative effect on most meat traits and could partly replace SBM as a protein source in geese feeding. Hence, yellow lupin, potato protein and brewer’s yeast can be used in geese rearing followed by fattening with oats. Some producers do not have the option of using soybean meal. Small-scale farms use their own crop resources, so lupins can be an alternative source of protein for soybean meal. MDPI 2020-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7070721/ /pubmed/31991712 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020200 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Biesek, Jakub
Kuźniacka, Joanna
Banaszak, Mirosław
Adamski, Marek
The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal
title The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal
title_full The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal
title_fullStr The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal
title_full_unstemmed The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal
title_short The Quality of Carcass and Meat from Geese Fed Diets with or without Soybean Meal
title_sort quality of carcass and meat from geese fed diets with or without soybean meal
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7070721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31991712
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020200
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