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Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot

Dental classification of carcasses is used as a parameter of cattle maturity at slaughter, and it can influence carcass and meat quality traits. Brazilian beef-packing companies use the number of permanent incisor (PI) teeth as a parameter for bonus and certification of carcasses with superior quali...

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Autores principales: Santiago, Bismarck Moreira, Baldassini, Welder Angelo, de Aquino Tomaz, Laís, Rocha, Leone Campos, dos Santos, Wellington Bizarria, Curi, Rogério Abdallah, Chardulo, Luis Artur Loyola, Machado Neto, Otávio Rodrigues
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Society for Food Science of Animal Resources 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8112317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34017961
http://dx.doi.org/10.5851/kosfa.2021.e16
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author Santiago, Bismarck Moreira
Baldassini, Welder Angelo
de Aquino Tomaz, Laís
Rocha, Leone Campos
dos Santos, Wellington Bizarria
Curi, Rogério Abdallah
Chardulo, Luis Artur Loyola
Machado Neto, Otávio Rodrigues
author_facet Santiago, Bismarck Moreira
Baldassini, Welder Angelo
de Aquino Tomaz, Laís
Rocha, Leone Campos
dos Santos, Wellington Bizarria
Curi, Rogério Abdallah
Chardulo, Luis Artur Loyola
Machado Neto, Otávio Rodrigues
author_sort Santiago, Bismarck Moreira
collection PubMed
description Dental classification of carcasses is used as a parameter of cattle maturity at slaughter, and it can influence carcass and meat quality traits. Brazilian beef-packing companies use the number of permanent incisor (PI) teeth as a parameter for bonus and certification of carcasses with superior quality. However, when non-castrated male such as F1 Angus-Nellore (Bos taurus×Bos indicus) are slaughtered, only animals without PI teeth are subsidized by the breed association. We evaluated these animals finished in feedlot for 180 days with zero versus two PI teeth on the carcass and meat quality traits. At the time of slaughter, 88 carcasses were selected, forming two treatments according to dental carcass maturity (0 versus 2 PI teeth; 44 animals per category). It was demonstrated that the number of PI teeth (0 versus 2 PI) did not influence (p>0.05) carcass (weights, yield, cooling loss, ribeye area and the backfat thickness) and meat quality traits (Longissimus thoracis chemical composition, color, cooking losses, shear force and pH). Thus, dental carcass maturity (zero versus two PI teeth) does not influence non-castrated male F1 Angus-Nellore finished in feedlot for 180 days. This is the first study to demonstrate that carcasses of non-castrated male F1 Angus-Nellore with two PI teeth should be subsidized in a similar way to those with zero PI teeth. Moreover, Brazilian beef-packing companies could produce heavier and leaner carcasses of acceptable quality though the use of crossbred cattle such as non-castrated F1 Angus Nellore.
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spelling pubmed-81123172021-05-19 Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot Santiago, Bismarck Moreira Baldassini, Welder Angelo de Aquino Tomaz, Laís Rocha, Leone Campos dos Santos, Wellington Bizarria Curi, Rogério Abdallah Chardulo, Luis Artur Loyola Machado Neto, Otávio Rodrigues Food Sci Anim Resour Short Communication Dental classification of carcasses is used as a parameter of cattle maturity at slaughter, and it can influence carcass and meat quality traits. Brazilian beef-packing companies use the number of permanent incisor (PI) teeth as a parameter for bonus and certification of carcasses with superior quality. However, when non-castrated male such as F1 Angus-Nellore (Bos taurus×Bos indicus) are slaughtered, only animals without PI teeth are subsidized by the breed association. We evaluated these animals finished in feedlot for 180 days with zero versus two PI teeth on the carcass and meat quality traits. At the time of slaughter, 88 carcasses were selected, forming two treatments according to dental carcass maturity (0 versus 2 PI teeth; 44 animals per category). It was demonstrated that the number of PI teeth (0 versus 2 PI) did not influence (p>0.05) carcass (weights, yield, cooling loss, ribeye area and the backfat thickness) and meat quality traits (Longissimus thoracis chemical composition, color, cooking losses, shear force and pH). Thus, dental carcass maturity (zero versus two PI teeth) does not influence non-castrated male F1 Angus-Nellore finished in feedlot for 180 days. This is the first study to demonstrate that carcasses of non-castrated male F1 Angus-Nellore with two PI teeth should be subsidized in a similar way to those with zero PI teeth. Moreover, Brazilian beef-packing companies could produce heavier and leaner carcasses of acceptable quality though the use of crossbred cattle such as non-castrated F1 Angus Nellore. Korean Society for Food Science of Animal Resources 2021-05 2021-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8112317/ /pubmed/34017961 http://dx.doi.org/10.5851/kosfa.2021.e16 Text en © Korean Society for Food Science of Animal Resources https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Communication
Santiago, Bismarck Moreira
Baldassini, Welder Angelo
de Aquino Tomaz, Laís
Rocha, Leone Campos
dos Santos, Wellington Bizarria
Curi, Rogério Abdallah
Chardulo, Luis Artur Loyola
Machado Neto, Otávio Rodrigues
Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot
title Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot
title_full Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot
title_fullStr Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot
title_short Comparison of Dental Carcass Maturity in Non-Castrated Male F1 Angus-Nellore Cattle Finished in Feedlot
title_sort comparison of dental carcass maturity in non-castrated male f1 angus-nellore cattle finished in feedlot
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8112317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34017961
http://dx.doi.org/10.5851/kosfa.2021.e16
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