Martino Musati , Marco Sebastiano Bella , Antonino Bertino , Fabrizio Mangano , Giuseppe Luciano , Alessandro Priolo , Luisa Biondi , Massimiliano Lanza , Paweł Solarczyk , Guido Mangione , Antonio Natalello
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate the effects of dietary pistachio skin, a by-product of the confectionary industry, on the growth performance and meat quality of lambs. Twenty-four male lambs were assigned to 2 dietary treatments and fed for 60 days with a concentrate-based diet or the same diet with 120 g/kg DM of pistachio skin inclusion as a partial replacement of maize and soybean meal. We evaluated growth performance, ruminal fermentation, and lipid metabolism. The hydrophilic antioxidant capacity, and fat-soluble vitamins were assessed on fresh meat, while colour stability and lipid and protein oxidation were measured over 7-days of refrigerated storage. Dietary treatment did not affect growth performance, carcass traits, and ruminal fermentation (P > 0.05). Pistachio skin enriched meat with health promoting fatty acids, including vaccenic and rumenic acids (P = 0.037 and 0.031; respectively). Feeding lambs with a diet containing pistachio skin increased also meat tocopherols, including γ-tocopherol (P < 0.001), and reduced the lipid oxidation during 7-days of refrigerated storage measured as production of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (P = 0.004). Meat from lambs fed pistachio skin showed lesser values of a*, b*, and C* colour descriptors (P = 0.001, 0.009, and 0.003; respectively). The development of hydroperoxides, thiols, and carbonyls was not affected by dietary treatment (P > 0.05). Feeding lambs pistachio skin as a replacement for conventional feedstuffs may be useful for reducing the environmental impact of the meat supply chain. The inclusion of pistachio skin can be a profitable strategy for improving the fatty acid profile and lipid oxidative stability of lamb, without adverse effects on growth performance and ruminal fermentation.
期刊介绍:
Animal Feed Science and Technology is a unique journal publishing scientific papers of international interest focusing on animal feeds and their feeding.
Papers describing research on feed for ruminants and non-ruminants, including poultry, horses, companion animals and aquatic animals, are welcome.
The journal covers the following areas:
Nutritive value of feeds (e.g., assessment, improvement)
Methods of conserving and processing feeds that affect their nutritional value
Agronomic and climatic factors influencing the nutritive value of feeds
Utilization of feeds and the improvement of such
Metabolic, production, reproduction and health responses, as well as potential environmental impacts, of diet inputs and feed technologies (e.g., feeds, feed additives, feed components, mycotoxins)
Mathematical models relating directly to animal-feed interactions
Analytical and experimental methods for feed evaluation
Environmental impacts of feed technologies in animal production.