Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T22:28:49.676Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effects of high fat rapeseed press cake on growth, carcass, meat quality and body fat composition of leaner and fatter pig crossbreeds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2016

F. Schönet*
Affiliation:
Agricultural Institution of Thuringia, D-07743 Jena, Naumburger Straße 98, Germany
F. Tischendorf
Affiliation:
Agricultural Institution of Thuringia, D-07743 Jena, Naumburger Straße 98, Germany
U. Kirchheim
Affiliation:
Agricultural Institution of Thuringia, D-07743 Jena, Naumburger Straße 98, Germany
W. Reichardt
Affiliation:
Agricultural Institution of Thuringia, D-07743 Jena, Naumburger Straße 98, Germany
J. Bargholz
Affiliation:
Agricultural Institution of Thuringia, D-07743 Jena, Naumburger Straße 98, Germany
*
Get access

Abstract

A 3 ✕ 2 factorial experiment with a total of 60 male castrated pigs, live-weight range 24 to 104 kg, was carried out to test three dietary levels of high fat rapeseed press cake in two crossbreeds differing in carcass lean. The six groups with 10 pigs each representing either crossbreeds of Landrace (LR) ✕ (LR ✕ Large White (LW)) (groups 1, 3 and 5) or Pietrain (Pi) ✕ (LR ✕ LW) (groups 2, 4 and 6) were each offered, ad libitum, diets without rapeseed press cake (groups 1 and 2), or with rapeseed press cake: 75 g/kg diet (groups 3 and 4) or 150 g/kg diet (groups 5 and 6). The press cake produced in a small oil press contained 341 g crude protein per kg dry matter (DM), 181 g ether extract per kg DM and 23·3 mmol glucosinolates per kg DM. Rapeseed press cake, particularly at 150 g (3·2 mmol glucosinolates) per kg diet, lowered food intake and weight gain, though only significantly in the Pi-sired hybrids. There were no effects of the diets on leanness, whereas the 550 g/kg of carcass lean of Pi-sired pigs was significantly higher than the 510 g/kg of LR-sired hybrids. Meat of the Pi-sired crossbreeds showed a lower pH (tendency), higher conductivity, lower impedance and higher drip loss. At 150 g/kg diet rapeseed press cake LR-sired crossbreeds showed the darkest meat and the Pi ✕ LR, LW hybrids the lowest sensory evaluation score. In LR-sired hybrids the rapeseed press cake diets increased the backfat polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) to a lower degree (1·3% per 10 g rape oil increase in 1 kg diet) than in Pi-sired hybrids (2·6% per 10 g rapeseed increase in 1 kg diet). Using simple correlation coefficients, the sensory evaluation results were negatively correlated with carcass lean and tended to be so with meat fat PUFA content. Pigs should receive less than 2 mmol glucosinolates per kg diet corresponding to 50 to 100 g double zero rapeseed products per kg diet. Rape oil should be recommended according to the animals lean and fat status, respectively. Fatter pigs may receive a maximum of 40 g, leaner pigs a maximum of 20 g rape oil per kg diet.

Type
Non-ruminant nutrition, behaviour and production
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Affentranger, P., Gerwig, C., Seewer, G. J. F., Schwörer, D. and Künzi, N. 1996. Growth and carcass characteristics as well as meat and fat quality of three types of pigs under different feeding regimes. Livestock Production Science 45: 187196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassler, R. and Buchholz, H. 1993 [The chemical analysis of feeds, volume II.] VDLUFA Verlag, Darmstadt.Google Scholar
Bejerholm, C. and Barton-Gade, P. A. 1986. Effect of intramuscular fat level on eating quality of pig meat. Proceedings of the 32nd European meeting of meat research workers, pp. 389391.Google Scholar
Belitz, H. D. and Grosch, W. 1992. [Textbook of food chemistry, fourth edition.] Springer-Verlag, Berlin.Google Scholar
Bligh, E.G. and Dyer, W. J. 1959. A rapid method of total lipid extraction and purification. Canadian Journal of Biochemistry and Physiology 37: 911917.Google Scholar
Bourdon, D. and Aumaître, A. 1990. Low glucosinolate rapeseeds and rapeseed meals: effect of technological treatments on chemical composition, digestible energy content and feeding value for growing pigs. Animal Feed Science and Technology 30: 175191.Google Scholar
Cameron, N. D., Nute, G. R., Brown, S. N., Enser, M. and Wood, J. D. 1999. Meat quality of Large White pig genotypes selected for components of efficient lean growth rate. Animal Science 68: 115127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, L. D. and Schöne, F. 1998. Effects of antinutritional factors in rapeseed. Proceedings of the third international workshop on antinutritional factors in legume seeds and rapeseed, Wageningen. EAAP publication no. 93, pp. 185197. Wageningen pers.Google Scholar
Corino, C., Baldi, A. and Bontempo, V. 1991. Influence of low-glucosinolate rapeseed meal on performance and thyroid hormone status of heavy pigs. Animal Feed Science and Technology 35: 321331.Google Scholar
Deutsche Landwirtschaftsgesellschaft. 1991. [DLG feed tables, pigs, sixth edition.] DLG-Verlag, Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Dransfield, E., Nute, G. R., Mottram, D. S., Rowan, T. R. and Lawrence, T. L. J. 1985. Pork quality from pigs fed on low glucosinolate rapeseed meal: influence of level in the diet, sex and ultimate pH. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 36: 546556.Google Scholar
Eggum, B. O., Just, A. and Sørensen, H. 1985. Double low rapeseed meal in diets to growing-finishing pigs. In Advances in the production and utilization of cruciferous crops (ed. Sørensen, H.), pp. 167176. Martinus Nijhoff, Dordrecht.Google Scholar
European Community. 1990. Oilseeds — determination of glucosinolates — high performance liquid chromatography. Official Journal of the European Commission L170: 2734.Google Scholar
European Community. 1999. Commission regulation (EC) no. 2316/1999 of 22nd October 1999 laying down detailed for the application of council regulation (EC) no. 1251/1999 establishing a support system for producers of certain arable crops. Official Journal of the European Commission L280: 4365.Google Scholar
Flachowsky, G., Schöne, F., Schaarmann, G., Lübbe, F. and Böhme, H. 1997. Influence of oilseeds in combination with vitamin E supplementation in the diet on backfat quality of pigs. Animal Feed Science and Technology 64: 91100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fontanillas, R., Barroeta, A., Baucells, M. D. and Guardiola, F. 1998. Backfat fatty acid evolution in swine fed diets high in either cis-monounsaturated, trans, or (n-3) fats. Journal of Animal Science 76: 10451055.Google ScholarPubMed
Honikel, K. O. 1986. [Water-holding capacity of meat.] In [Chemical-physical characteristics of meat quality.] Federal Meat Research Institute, Kulmbach. Kulmbacher Reihe 6, pp. 6788.Google Scholar
Kirchheim, U., Schöne, F. and Reichardt, W. 1997. Effect of intramuscular fat on criteria of meat quality. Fleischwirtschaft 77: 410411.Google Scholar
Kracht, W., Jeroch, H., Matzke, W., Nürnberg, K., Ender, K. and Schumann, W. 1993. The influence of feeding rapeseed on growth and carcass fat quality of pigs. Lipid 98: 343351.Google Scholar
Lüdke, H., Schöne, F. and Hennig, A. 1985. [The influence of iodine, copper and zinc supplements to rations with a high level of rapesed meal on growth and on the function of the thyroid gland of fattening pigs. 1. Influence on fattening performance.] Archives of Animal Nutrition, Berlin 35: 835845.Google Scholar
MacDougall, D. B. and Rhodes, D. N. 1972. Characteristics of the appearance of meat. 3. Studies on the colour of meat from young bulls. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 23: 637647.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKinnon, P. J. and Bowland, J. P. 1977. Comparison of low glucosinolate-low erucic acid rapeseed meal (cv. Tower), commercial rapeseed meal and soybean meal as sources of protein for starting, growing and finishing pigs and young rats. Canadian Journal of Animal Science 57: 663678.Google Scholar
Müller, S. and Braun, U. 1998. [Performance testing and breeding value estimation on pigs in Thuringia. Annual report.] Agricultural Institution of Thuringia.Google Scholar
Mussmann, T., Schmitten, F., Jüngst, H., Tholen, E. and Schepers, K. H. 1994. [Comparing investigations on methods of lightness and colour measurement of pork.] Züchtungskunde 66: 359372.Google Scholar
Petersen, J. S., Oksbjerg, N. and Henckel, P. 1996. Meat colour of Danish Landrace pigs, years 1973 and 1995. I. Growth performance traits and their relation to meat colour. Proceedings of the 42nd international congress of meat science and technology, Lillehammer, Norway, pp. 8081.Google Scholar
Pliquett, F., Pliquett, U., Schöberlein, L. and Freywald, K. 1995. [Impedance measurements of meat quality.] Fleischwirtschaft 75: 496498.Google Scholar
Reichardt, W., Müller, S., Schuster, M. and Peschke, W. 1998. [Comparison of methods of exact analysis of intramuscular fat content in the musculus longissimus dorsi of the pig.] Archiv für Tierzucht 41: 167178.Google Scholar
Schöne, F. 1996. Rapeseed acceptability to pigs. Feedmix 4: 2932.Google Scholar
Schöne, F., Groppel, B., Hennig, A., Jahreis, G. and Lange, R. 1997a. Rapeseed meals, methimazole, thiocyanate and iodine affect growth and thyroid. Investigations into glucosinolate tolerance in the pig. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 74: 6980.Google Scholar
Schöne, F., Hartung, H., Jahreis, G., Graf, T. and Tischendorf, F. 1998. [Evaluation of high fat rape feeds (seed and cake) on breeding sows — feed intake, rearing results and milk fat composition.] Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition 79: 184197.Google Scholar
Schöne, F., Hennig, A. and Lange, R. 1990. [Selection of feed containing rapeseed meals with different glucosinolate content by growing pigs.] Agribiological Research 43: 260269.Google Scholar
Schöne, F., Jahreis, G., Flachowsky, G. and Kirchheim, U. 1999.Milk and meat quality due to rapeseed products application in farm animals. Proceedings of the 10th international rapeseed congress, Canberra, Australia, document 72. doc.Google Scholar
Schöne, F., Rudolph, B., Kirchheim, U. and Knapp, G. 1997b. Counteracting the negative effects of rapeseed and rapeseed press cake in pig diets. British Journal of Nutrition 78: 947962.Google Scholar
Steel, G. G. and Torrie, J. H. 1980. Principles and procedures of statistics, second edition. McGraw-Hill Inc., New York.Google Scholar
Tischendorf, F., Kirchheim, U., Leiterer, M. and Schöne, F. 1998. [?Evaluation of rapeseed press cake in the experiment with growing pigs.] Proceedings of the Society of Nutrition Physiology, vol. 7, p. 44 (abstr.).Google Scholar
Tornberg, E., Anderson, A., Göransson, A. and Seth G., Von. 1993. Water and fat distribution in pork in relation to sensory properties. In Pork quality: genetic and metabolic factors (ed. Puolanne, E. and Demeyer, D. I.). Proceedings OECD workshop, Helsinki, pp. 239258. CAB International, Wallingford.Google Scholar
Unruh, J. A., Friesen, K. G., Stuewe, S. R., Dunn, B. L., Nelssen, J. L., Goodband, R. D. and Tokach, M. D. 1996. The Influence of genotype, sex and dietary lysine on pork subprimal cut yields and carcass quality of pigs fed to either 104 or 127 kilograms. Journal of Animal Science 74: 12741283.Google Scholar
Vries, A. G. de and Wal P. G.van, der. 1993. Breeding for pork quality. In Pork quality: genetic and metabolic factors (ed. Puolanne, E. and Demeyer, D. I.). Proceedings of the OECD workshop, Helsinki, pp. 5875. CAB International, Wallingford.Google Scholar
Warnants, N., Oeckel M. J., van and V., Boucque, Ch. 1996. Incorporation of dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids in pork tissues and its implications for the endproducts. Meat Science 44: 125144.Google Scholar
Warnants, N., Oeckel M. J., van and V., Boucque, Ch. 1999. Incorporation of dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids in pork tissues. Journal of Animal Science 77: 24782490.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Western Canada Canola/Rapeseed Recommending Committee. 2001. Procedures for the Western Canada Canola/ Rapeseed Recommending Committee incorporated for the evaluation and recommendation of registration of canola/rapeseed candidate cultivars in Western Canada.Google Scholar
Wood, J. D. and Enser, M. 1997. Factors influencing fatty acids in meat and the role of antioxidants in improving meat quality. British Journal of Nutrition 78: 4960.Google Scholar