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1.
Animal ; 16(9): 100624, 2022 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36049262

RÉSUMÉ

Although it is still most common to rear dairy calves separately from adult cattle, the interest in prolonged contact between dairy calves and lactating cows during early life is increasing. Previous research has documented positive effects of cow-calf contact (CCC) on for example early calf growth and udder health of suckled cows, but also negative effects such as increased separation distress and reduced weight gains after weaning. The aim of this study was to use information from European farms with prolonged cow-calf contact to identify innovative solutions to common challenges for CCC farms. Commercial dairy farms that kept calves with adult lactating cows for seven days or more after birth were invited to participate, and interviews were performed with 104 farmers from six countries. During interviews, information about farm management, calf rearing, farmers' perception of animal health on their farm, and farmers' drivers and barriers for implementing CCC were collected. We found that CCC was practised in a large variety of housing and management systems, and that calves could be reared together with their dam, with foster cows, or using a combination of the two. The contact period varied considerably (7-305 days) between farms and about 25% of the farms manually milk fed the calves during parts of the milk feeding period. Daily contact time varied between farms, from 30 minutes per day to permanent contact except at milking. Behaviours indicative of separation distress, most commonly vocalisation in cows and calves, were reported by 87% of the farmers. Strategies to alleviate separation distress, for example simultaneous gradual weaning and separation, were used on some farms. Building constraints were most often mentioned as a barrier for implementing CCC. Our findings suggest that CCC is practised in a variety of commonly used husbandry systems. Reported challenges were primarily related to weaning and separation, and to building constraints; these aspects should be areas of future research.


Sujet(s)
Industrie laitière , Lactation , Animaux , Bovins , Études transversales , Fermes , Femelle , Lait , Sevrage
2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 19654, 2021 10 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34608216

RÉSUMÉ

Extensive farming systems are characterized by seasons with different diet quality along the year, as pasture availability is strictly depending on climatic conditions. A number of problems for cattle may occur in each season. Tannins are natural polyphenolic compounds that can be integrated in cows' diet to overcome these seasonal problems, but little is known about their effect on milk quality according to the season. This study was designed to assess the effects of 150 g/head × day of tannin extract supplementation on proximate composition, urea, colour, cheesemaking aptitude, antioxidant capacity, and fatty acid (FA) profile of cow milk, measured during the wet season (WS) and the dry season (DS) of Mediterranean climate. In WS, dietary tannins had marginal effect on milk quality. Conversely, in DS, the milk from cows eating tannins showed 10% lower urea and slight improvement in antioxidant capacity, measured with FRAP and TEAC assays. Also, tannin extract supplementation in DS reduced branched-chain FA concentration, C18:1 t10 to C18:1 t11 ratio and rumenic to linoleic acid ratio. Tannins effect on rumen metabolism was enhanced in the season in which green herbage was not available, probably because of the low protein content, and high acid detergent fibre and lignin contents in diet. Thus, the integration of tannin in the diet should be adapted to the season. This could have practical implications for a more conscious use of tannin-rich extracts, and other tannin sources such as agro-industrial by-products and forages.


Sujet(s)
Aliment pour animaux , Compléments alimentaires , Lait/normes , Saisons , Tanins , Animaux , Bovins , Femelle , Qualité alimentaire , Valeur nutritive , Tanins/administration et posologie
3.
J Dairy Sci ; 104(9): 9543-9555, 2021 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34127270

RÉSUMÉ

The aim of the present study was to compare the effect of dietary tannins on cow cheese quality in 2 different grazing seasons in the Mediterranean. Two experiments were performed on 14 dairy cows reared in an extensive system. The first experiment took place in the wet season (WS), and the second experiment took place in the dry season (DS). In the WS and DS experiments, cows freely grazed green pasture or dry stubbles, respectively, and the diet was supplemented with pelleted concentrate and hay. In both experiments, the cows were divided into 2 balanced groups: a control group and a group (TAN) receiving 150 g of tannin extract/head per day. After 23 d of dietary treatment, individual milk was collected, processed into individual cheeses, and aged 25 d. Milk was analyzed for chemical composition, color parameters, and cheesemaking aptitude (laboratory cheese yield and milk coagulation properties). Cheese was analyzed for chemical composition, proteolysis, color parameters, rheological parameters, fatty acid profile, and odor-active volatile compounds. Data from the WS and DS experiments were statistically analyzed separately with an analysis of covariance model. In the WS experiment, dietary tannin supplementation had no effect on milk and cheese parameters except for a reduced concentration of 2-heptanone in cheese. In the DS experiment, TAN milk showed lower urea N, and TAN cheese had lower C18:1 trans-10 concentration and n-6:n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid ratio compared with the control group. These differences are likely due to the effect of tannins on rumen N metabolism and fatty acid biohydrogenation. Dietary tannins may differently affect the quality of cheese from Mediterranean grazing cows according to the grazing season. Indeed, tannin bioactivity on rumen metabolism seems to be enhanced during the dry season, when diet is low in protein and rich in acid detergent fiber and lignin. The supplementation dose used in this study (1% of estimated dry matter intake) had no detrimental effects on cheese yield or cheesemaking parameters. Also, it is unlikely that sensorial characteristics would be affected by this kind of dietary tannin supplementation.


Sujet(s)
Fromage , Tanins , Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Animaux , Bovins , Fromage/analyse , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Compléments alimentaires/analyse , Femelle , Lactation , Lait , Extraits de plantes , Saisons
4.
Animal ; 13(2): 435-443, 2019 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29983123

RÉSUMÉ

Little information is available on the effects of different sources of tannins on ruminant product quality. Nowadays several tannin-rich extracts, produced from different plants, are available and contain tannins belonging to different chemical groups, but most of these have not been used so far as feed supplements. The present study aimed at comparing the effects of feeding three tannin extracts (one containing condensed tannins and two containing hydrolysable tannins) to lambs on growth performances and meat oxidative stability. Comisana male lambs were divided into four groups (n=9 each) and were fed for 75 days: a concentrate-based diet (CON), or CON supplemented with 4% tannin extracts from either mimosa ( MI; Acacia mearnsii, De Wild; condensed tannins), chestnut (CH; Castanea sativa, Mill; hydrolysable ellagitannins) or tara (TA; Cesalpinia spinosa, (Molina) Kuntze; hydrolysable gallotannins). Only CH reduced growth rate, final weight, carcass weight and feed intake (P0.05). The TA diet increased (P<0.001) the concentration of γ-tocopherol in muscle and tended to increase that of α-tocopherol (P=0.058). Oxidative stability of raw and cooked meat, or of meat homogenates incubated with pro-oxidants, was not affected by the extracts. These results, compared with those reported in the literature, highlight that some effects of tannins cannot be easily generalized, but may strictly depend on their specific characteristics and on conditions inherent to the basal diet and the metabolic status of the animals.


Sujet(s)
Fabaceae/composition chimique , Fagaceae/composition chimique , Viande/analyse , Ovis/physiologie , Tanins/métabolisme , Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Animaux , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Compléments alimentaires/analyse , Stress oxydatif , Extraits de plantes/administration et posologie , Extraits de plantes/métabolisme , Répartition aléatoire , Ovis/croissance et développement , Tanins/administration et posologie
5.
Meat Sci ; 139: 134-141, 2018 May.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29413673

RÉSUMÉ

Twenty-eight Barbarine male lambs were used to investigate the effect of dietary Nigella sativa seeds (NSS) on meat fatty acids and oxidative stability in two different feeding systems (high- or low-concentrate). Dietary treatments were planned to offer: 70% barley hay and 30% concentrate (LC); LC+12g/day of NSS (LCN); 30% barley hay and 70% concentrate (HC); HC+12g/day of NSS (HCN). NSS increased intramuscular fat only in the low-concentrate system (P=0.039); accordingly, the content of 14:0, c-9 14:1, t-9 18:1, t-11 18:1 and both individual and sum of odd and branched chain fatty acids were greater in LCN than LC meat. TBARS in raw meat increased from 0 to 3days of refrigerated storage regardless NSS supplementation. From 3 to 6days, TBARS further increased only in the meat from lambs not receiving NSS. At 6-days storage, TBARS were lower (P<0.05) in the meat of lambs receiving NSS compared to the meat of lambs not receiving NSS.


Sujet(s)
Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Acides gras/analyse , Nigella sativa , Viande rouge/analyse , Tissu adipeux , Animaux , Composition corporelle , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Stockage des aliments , Mâle , Graines , Ovis aries , Substances réactives à l'acide thiobarbiturique/analyse
6.
Animal ; 11(3): 411-417, 2017 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27510764

RÉSUMÉ

The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of dietary whole dried citrus pulp (DCP) on the antioxidant status of lamb tissues. In total, 17 lambs were divided into two groups and fed for 56 days: a barley-based concentrate diet (CON - eight animals), or a concentrate-based diet including 35% DCP to partially replace barley (CIT - nine animals). The CIT diet contained a double concentration of phenolic compounds than the CON diet (7.9 v. 4.0 g/kg dry matter (DM), respectively), but had no effect (P>0.05) on the overall antioxidant capacity of the hydrophilic fraction of blood plasma, liver and muscle. The CIT diet contained clearly more α-tocopherol than the CON diet (45.7 v. 10.3 mg/kg DM), which could explain the higher concentration of α-tocopherol in liver, plasma and muscle (P<0.05). The dietary treatment had no effect on the extent of lipid peroxidation, measured as thiobarbituric acid and reactive substances assay (TBARS values) in the faeces, small intestine, liver, plasma and muscle. Nevertheless, when muscle homogenates were incubated in the presence of Fe3+/ascorbate to induce lipid peroxidation, the muscle from lambs fed DCP displayed lower TBARS values (P<0.01), which negatively correlated with the concentration of α-tocopherol in muscle. These results showed that feeding whole DCP to ruminants increases the antioxidant status of muscle through an increase in the deposition of α-tocopherol.


Sujet(s)
Antioxydants/métabolisme , Citrus/composition chimique , Polyphénols/composition chimique , Ovis aries/physiologie , Vitamine E/métabolisme , Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Animaux , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Mâle , Répartition aléatoire
7.
J Anim Sci ; 94(4): 1550-60, 2016 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27136014

RÉSUMÉ

This work investigated the effects of feeding silage mixtures of a plant containing polyphenol oxidase (PPO; red clover [; RC]), a plant containing tannins (sainfoin [; SF]), and a grass species not containing these compounds (timothy [; T]) on ruminal and intramuscular (i.m.) fatty acids of lambs. Forty 4-mo-old castrated male Romane lambs, divided into 5 groups, received 1 of the following silages: 1) T (100%), 2) a binary mixture of timothy and tannin-containing sainfoin ( cv. Perly; 50:50 [T-SF]), 3) a binary mixture of timothy and PPO-containing red clover ( cv. Mervius; 50:50 [T-RC]), 4) a ternary mixture of timothy, sainfoin, and red clover containing both tannins and PPO (50:25:25, respectively [T-SF-RC]), and 5) a binary mixture of tannin-containing sainfoin and PPO-containing red clover (50:50 [SF-RC]). In the rumen digesta, the partial or total replacement of T with forage legumes was associated with greater concentrations of PUFA ( < 0.001) and 1esser concentrations of MUFA ( < 0.001). The inclusion of forage legumes in the silage favored the accumulation of 18:3 -3 ( < 0.001), with the greatest concentrations being observed in SF-RC. This latter diet also led to the greatest percentage of 18:2 -6 ( < 0.001). Forage legumes decreased the -11 18:1 to 30% of T in rumen digesta ( < 0.001). Forage legumes decreased the total concentration of branched-chain fatty acids in the rumen digesta (on average, -28%; < 0.001), this effect being less marked (-17%; = 0.014) in T-RC in comparison with T. The dietary treatment tended to affect the proportion of MUFA ( = 0.081) and of PUFA ( = 0.079) in the i.m. fat of the LM, respectively, at the highest and lowest numerical value in the T group. The sum of -3 fatty acids was less in the T and T-SF groups compared with the mixture of legumes without T (SF-RC; < 0.001 and < 0.008, respectively). The latter group had also a lesser -6-to--3 ratio than the T-SF group ( = 0.01). -11 18:1 was greater ( < 0.03) in lambs given T as the sole silage in comparison with lambs given T-RC, T-SF-RC, and SF-RC. Rumenic acid (-9 -11 CLA) was detected at a greater percentage in the LM from the animals fed the T silage compared with animals fed the T-SF-RC treatment ( = 0.004). Contrarily, -9 -12 -15 18:3 was found at a greater concentration in the muscle from lambs in the SF-RC treatment compared with lambs in the other treatments ( < 0.001). Furthermore, the T-RC group showed a greater proportion of α-linolenic acid than the T group ( = 0.03). In conclusion, the effects of the 2 active compounds (PPO and tannins) appear to be similar and additive. Moreover, a silage composed of a mixture of RC and SF is an excellent forage for growing lambs in terms of i.m. fatty acid composition.


Sujet(s)
Fabaceae/composition chimique , Contenus gastro-intestinaux/composition chimique , Muscles squelettiques/composition chimique , Poaceae/composition chimique , Ovis , Ensilage/analyse , Phénomènes physiologiques nutritionnels chez l'animal , Animaux , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Acides gras , Femelle , Mâle , Phleum , Rumen , Tanins/composition chimique , Acide alpha-linolénique
8.
J Anim Sci ; 93(6): 3179-88, 2015 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26115304

RÉSUMÉ

In the present study, we have hypothesized that replacing barley with high proportions of dried citrus pulp in a concentrate-based diet for lambs could increase the intake of unsaturated fatty acids and could reduce the rate of the ruminal biohydrogenation of PUFA, with a consequent improvement of the intramuscular fatty acid composition. To test this hypothesis, 26 Comisana lambs were divided into 3 groups and for 56 d were fed a barley-based concentrate diet (CON; 8 lambs) or 2 diets in which barley was replaced with 24% (CIT24; 9 lambs) or 35% (CIT35; 9 lambs) dried citrus pulp. An overall improvement of the fatty acid composition of LM from lambs fed citrus pulp-containing diets was found. The PUFA/SFA ratio was lower (P < 0.05) in the LM from lambs in the CON group compared with both the CIT24 and CIT35 groups. The thrombogenic index was lower (P < 0.05) in meat from lambs fed the CIT35 diet compared with those fed the CON diet. The CIT35 diet increased the proportion of C20:5 n-3 in the LM (P < 0.05), whereas the CIT24 diet enhanced that of C22:6 -3 (P < 0.05) compared with the CON diet. Some of these results might be explained considering that feeding the CIT24 and CIT35 diets increased the intake of total fatty acids (P < 0.05) and of C18:3 n-3 (P < 0.01) compared with feeding the CON treatment. On the other hand, phenolic compounds present in citrus pulp could have inhibited the ruminal biohydrogenation of PUFA. This is supported by the fact that regardless of the level of inclusion in the diet, citrus pulp increased the proportion of rumenic acid (P < 0.001) in LM compared with the CON diet. The plasma from lambs fed both CIT24 and CIT35 diets had a greater percentage of vaccenic acid (VA; < 0.001) compared with that from lambs fed the CON diet, and the CIT35 diet increased the proportion of rumenic acid in plasma compared with the CON treatment (P < 0.05). In the ruminal fluid, stearic acid (SA) tended to decrease, and the sum of CLA tended to increase (P = 0.09) with increasing level of citrus pulp in the diets. Furthermore, the SA/(SA + VA) ratio tended to be lower (P = 0.10) in the ruminal fluid from lambs fed the CIT35 diet compared with that of the CON group. In conclusion, our results support the hypothesis that replacing barley with citrus pulp in the diet of growing lambs improves intramuscular fatty acid composition and underline the need for specific studies to clarify the mechanisms by which feeding citrus pulp affects the fatty acid metabolism in ruminants.


Sujet(s)
Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Citrus/composition chimique , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Ovis/métabolisme , Phénomènes physiologiques nutritionnels chez l'animal , Animaux , Liquides biologiques , Citrus/métabolisme , Acides gras/métabolisme , Acides linoléiques conjugués/métabolisme , Métabolisme lipidique , Muscles squelettiques/composition chimique
9.
Animal ; 9(4): 715-22, 2015 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25387868

RÉSUMÉ

This study was conducted to determine the effects of feeding olive cake and linseed to lambs on the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in raw and cooked meat. Four groups of eight male Appenninica lambs each were fed: conventional cereal-based concentrates (diet C), concentrates containing 20% on a dry matter (DM) basis of rolled linseed (diet L), concentrates containing 35% DM of stoned olive cake (diet OC), or concentrates containing both rolled linseed (10% DM) and stoned olive cake (17% DM; diet OCL). The longissimus dorsi muscle of each lamb was sampled at slaughter and was subjected to VOC profiling through the use of SPME-GC-MS. In the raw meat, the concentration of 3-methylpentanoic acid was higher in treatment C as compared with treatments L, OC and OCL (P<0.01). Moreover the level of nonanoic acid was greater in treatments C and OC than in treatment L (P<0.05). With respect to alcohols, in raw meat the amount of 2-phenoxyethanol in treatment OCL was lower than in treatments C (P<0.01) and OC (P<0.05), while in cooked meat the amount of 1-pentanol was higher in treatment C than in treatment OC (P<0.05). Apart from these compounds, none of the lipid oxidation-derived volatiles was significantly affected by the dietary treatment. Therefore, the results suggest that the replacement of cereal concentrates with linseed and/or olive cake did not cause appreciable changes in the production of volatile organic compounds in lamb meat.


Sujet(s)
Cuisine (activité) , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Lin , Viande/analyse , Olea , Phénomènes physiologiques nutritionnels chez l'animal , Animaux , Mâle , Ovis
10.
Meat Sci ; 100: 256-61, 2015 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25460134

RÉSUMÉ

The effect of feeding pigs with carob pulp on meat quality was investigated. Nine pigs were finished on a conventional concentrate-based diet (control), while two groups received a diet comprising of the same ingredients with the inclusion of 8% or 15% carob pulp (Carob 8% and Carob 15%, respectively). Feeding carob-containing diets reduced the concentration of saturated fatty acids in the muscle, increased the concentration of monounsaturated fatty acids in meat (P < 0.01) and of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and reduced the n-6/n-3 PUFA ratio (P < 0.001). The meat underwent slow oxidative deterioration over 9 days of storage. However, the Carob 15% treatment increased meat susceptibility to lipid oxidation across storage (P = 0.03), while the dietary treatment did not affect meat colour stability. In conclusion, feeding pigs with carob pulp could represent a strategy,in the Mediterranean areas, to naturally improve meat nutritional value and to promote the exploitation of this local feed resource.


Sujet(s)
Aliment pour animaux , Régime alimentaire , Matières grasses alimentaires/analyse , Fabaceae , Acides gras/métabolisme , Peroxydation lipidique , Viande/analyse , Tissu adipeux/métabolisme , Animaux , Composition corporelle , Couleur , Matières grasses alimentaires/normes , Compléments alimentaires , Acides gras insaturés/métabolisme , Galactanes , Humains , Mannanes , Muscles/métabolisme , Valeur nutritive , Oxydoréduction , Gommes végétales , Graines , Suidae
11.
Meat Sci ; 96(4): 1489-93, 2014 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24440744

RÉSUMÉ

This study investigated the effect of replacing cereal concentrates with high levels of dried citrus pulp in the diet on lamb meat oxidative stability. Over 56 days, lambs were fed a barley-based concentrate (Control) or concentrates in which 24% and 35% dried citrus pulp were included to partially replace barley (Citrus 24% and Citrus 35%, respectively). Meat was aged under vacuum for 4 days and subsequently stored aerobically at 4 °C. The Control diet increased the redness, yellowness and saturation of meat after blooming (P<0.01). Regardless of the level of supplementation, dietary dried citrus pulp strongly reduced meat lipid oxidation over 6 days of aerobic storage (P<0.001), while colour parameters did not change noticeably over storage and their variation rate was not affected by the diet. In conclusion, replacing cereals with dried citrus pulp in concentrate-based diets might represent a feasible strategy to naturally improve meat oxidative stability and to promote the exploitation of this by-product.


Sujet(s)
Citrus , Compléments alimentaires , Conservation aliments , Fruit , Peroxydation lipidique , Viande/analyse , Préparations à base de plantes , Aliment pour animaux , Animaux , Couleur , Stockage des aliments , Humains , Ovis aries
12.
Animal ; 8(1): 51-7, 2014 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24168780

RÉSUMÉ

Sixteen lambs were divided into two groups and fed two different diets. Eight lambs were stall-fed with a concentrate-based diet (C), and the remaining eight lambs were allowed to graze on Lolium perenne (G). The antioxidant status was measured in the liver and plasma samples before and after solid-phase extraction (SPE) to probe the antioxidant effects that grass phenolic compounds may have conferred onto the animal tissues. The liver and plasma samples from grass-fed lambs displayed a greater antioxidant capacity than the tissues from C lamb group, but only if samples had not been passed through SPE cartridges. Finally, the feed and animal tissues, which had been purified by SPE, were analysed by liquid chromatography combined with mass spectrometry (LC���MS) to identify phenolic compounds present in L. perenne and to evaluate the results from the antioxidant assays. It would appear that the improvement of the antioxidant capacity of lamb liver and plasma from lambs fed ryegrass was not related to the direct transfer of phenolic compounds from grass to the animal tissues.


Sujet(s)
Antioxydants/pharmacologie , Foie/métabolisme , Lolium/composition chimique , Phénols/pharmacologie , Extraits de plantes/pharmacologie , Ovis/métabolisme , Animaux , Chromatographie en phase liquide , Foie/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Spectrométrie de masse , Ovis/sang , Extraction en phase solide
13.
Meat Sci ; 96(2 Pt A): 744-9, 2014 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24211542

RÉSUMÉ

Lambs were assigned to four groups of seven and treated as follows for 12 days: control group (BP) was fed beet pulp; group T (tannin remedy) received the BP diet including 80 g/kg of quebracho extract; group S (saponin remedy) received the BP diet including 15 g/kg of quillaja extract; and group C had a free choice between T and S remedies. Lipid oxidation was lower in meat from S lambs compared to T lambs (P<0.05). Among the volatile compounds, lactate was lower in meat from S lambs compared to T animals (P=0.05). Metabolomic analysis showed that the T treatment increased ribose, fructose, glucose and sorbitol concentration in meat (P<0.05), while cholesterol was decreased by S and C treatments. The T treatment increased the concentration of C14:1 cis-9 (P<0.05). These findings indicate that treatments for parasite control containing tannins and saponins do not detrimentally affect sheep meat quality.


Sujet(s)
Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Qualité alimentaire , Viande/analyse , Saponines/composition chimique , Tanins/composition chimique , Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Animaux , Acides gras/analyse , Contamination des aliments/prévention et contrôle , Parasitologie alimentaire , Stockage des aliments , Haemonchus/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Haemonchus/croissance et développement , Haemonchus/isolement et purification , Larve/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Larve/croissance et développement , Métabolisme lipidique , Viande/parasitologie , Métabolomique , Muscles squelettiques/composition chimique , Quillaja/composition chimique , Saponines/administration et posologie , Ovis aries , Tanins/administration et posologie , Substances réactives à l'acide thiobarbiturique/analyse , Composés organiques volatils/analyse
14.
Meat Sci ; 95(2): 212-8, 2013 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23747613

RÉSUMÉ

Over 89 days, 10 lambs (S) were fed concentrates and hay in stall, while 9 lambs (P) grazed at pasture. Two groups of 9 animals grazed at pasture until switching to a concentrate-based diet for 14 or 37 days before slaughter (P-S14 and P-S37). The fat content of longissimus dorsi muscle (LM) increased with increasing duration of concentrate feeding (P=0.05). As a consequence, the concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and of the highly peroxidisable (HP) PUFA in the polar lipids was similar between treatments. Lipid oxidation in fresh LM over 8 days of storage was affected by the diet (P<0.0005) with the P-S37 and P treatments producing, respectively, the highest and the lowest TBARS values. The P treatment reduced TBARS in cooked minced LM over 2 days of storage and no difference was found between the P-S14, P-S37 and S treatments. Colour stability of fresh LM was not noticeably affected by the dietary treatment.


Sujet(s)
Aliment pour animaux/analyse , Métabolisme lipidique , Viande/analyse , Stress oxydatif , Abattoirs , Animaux , Couleur , Cuisine (activité) , Acides gras insaturés/métabolisme , Stockage des aliments , Mâle , Muscles paravertébraux/métabolisme , Ovis aries , Substances réactives à l'acide thiobarbiturique/métabolisme
15.
Animal ; 7(9): 1559-66, 2013 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23597321

RÉSUMÉ

Multielemental stable isotope ratio (SIR) analysis was used in lamb plasma, erythrocytes and muscle to detect the switch from a pasture- to a concentrate-based diet, with the aim of verifying the possibility to trace the change of feeding in animal tissues. During 89 days of experimental feeding, lambs were subjected to four dietary treatments: pasture (P), pasture followed by concentrate in the stall for either 14 days (P-S14) or 37 days (P-S37) or concentrate in the stall (S). Pasture and concentrate diets comprised C3 plants only and had different values of 13C/12C, 18O/16O, 2H/1H and 34S/32S ratios. Muscle 13C/12C and 34S/32S and plasma 13C/12C and 18O/16O ratios in P, P-S14 and P-S37 lambs were significantly different. A multivariate analytical approach revealed that 13C/12C and 18O/16O ratios in plasma were the most powerful variables for the discrimination among the dietary treatments.


Sujet(s)
Phénomènes physiologiques nutritionnels chez l'animal/physiologie , Régime alimentaire , Muscles squelettiques/composition chimique , Ovis/sang , Analyse de variance , Animaux , Isotopes du carbone/sang , Analyse discriminante , Italie , Spectrométrie de masse/médecine vétérinaire , Analyse multifactorielle , Isotopes de l'oxygène/sang , Isotopes du soufre/sang , Tritium/sang
16.
Meat Sci ; 93(3): 703-14, 2013 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23273482

RÉSUMÉ

Over 40 days, lambs were fed: concentrate (C), concentrate containing 20% linseed (L), concentrate containing 35% olive cake (OC), or concentrate containing 10% linseed and 17% olive cake (OCL). The polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and peroxidation index (PI) in phospholipids were increased by the L and OCL treatments (P=0.007 and P=0.003, respectively). The OC and OCL diets increased the concentration of tocopherol in muscle (P<0.001). Compared to the OC and OCL diet, the L diet increased fatty acid oxidation, measured as conjugated dienes (CD; P=0.003), peroxides (PV; P<0.001) and TBARS (P=0.002) in minced muscle over 11 days of storage in high-oxygen atmosphere. Also, the L diet increased (P<0.001) the levels cholesterol oxidation products (COPs). In conclusion, feeding olive cake improved the oxidative stability of lamb meat and the combination of olive cake and linseed improved the fatty acid composition of meat without compromising its oxidative stability.


Sujet(s)
Cholestérol/métabolisme , Matières grasses alimentaires/métabolisme , Acides gras insaturés/métabolisme , Lin , Peroxydation lipidique , Viande/analyse , Olea , Animaux , Régime alimentaire , Stockage des aliments , Fruit , Muscles squelettiques/métabolisme , Oxydoréduction , Oxygène , Phospholipides/métabolisme , Graines , Ovis , Substances réactives à l'acide thiobarbiturique , Tocophérols/métabolisme
17.
Oecologia ; 172(4): 1041-9, 2013 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23223888

RÉSUMÉ

Generalist herbivores typically grow better on mixed- than on single-component diets. This response has been attributed to food complementarities that either enhance the utilization of nutrients or dilute the negative impacts of plant secondary compounds (PSC). For instance, when animals choose between foods that contain diverse PSC, they eat more than animals offered a food that contains just one PSC. In addition to their negative impacts on herbivore fitness, recent evidence suggests that at appropriate doses PSC may provide beneficial effects to herbivores (i.e., by reducing parasitic infections). Thus, complementarities among diverse PSC may not only influence an herbivore's ability to consume food but also reduce the incidence of disease. We assessed the complementary effects of two PSC by offering sheep (Ovis aries) a choice of foods containing condensed tannins and saponins while challenged with a parasitic (Haemonchus contortus) infection. Animals offered a choice ate more than animals just offered tannins or saponins in single rations. However, sheep offered choices displayed greater fecal egg counts (an indirect measurement of parasitic burdens) than sheep offered single rations. Thus, saponin- and tannin-containing foods were complementary resources regarding nutrient intake but antagonistic regarding effects on parasitic loads. The nature of the relationship among PSC may depend on the dimension (i.e., nutrient intake, disease) where the interaction occurs. A unifying currency such as growth or reproductive output may help understand the trade-offs between costs (disease) and benefits (nutrient and medicine intake) for herbivores grazing multiple PSC.


Sujet(s)
Herbivorie , Saponines , Tanins , Animaux , Comportement de choix , Infections à Haemonchus/psychologie , Numération des oeufs de parasites , Métabolisme secondaire , Ovis , Maladies des ovins/psychologie
18.
Meat Sci ; 92(4): 582-6, 2012 Dec.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22771112

RÉSUMÉ

Eighteen Barbarine lambs were assigned during 77 days to three dietary treatments (n=6): control, oat hay ad libitum and 400 g of concentrate; QS60 and the QS90 control diet supplemented with 60 mg and 90 mg Quillaja saponaria (QS) bark extract/kg dry matter, respectively. The analysis of pre-frozen longissimus dorsi muscle showed that the QS90 treatment reduced meat redness (a*) and saturation (C*) measured after 2h of blooming. It also reduced the rate of decrease in a* values (P=0.02) during 14 days of refrigerated storage. Supplementation with QS extended meat colour stability by reducing (P<0.05) the rate of increase in hue angle (H*) values. Neither the rate of metmyoglobin accumulation at the meat surface nor lipid peroxidation over storage duration differed between treatments. The overall meat volatile compound profile was similar between the groups. We conclude that supplementing QS affects meat colour development at the meat surface and extends its stability without producing detrimental effects on meat volatile compounds.


Sujet(s)
Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Viande/analyse , Muscles squelettiques/métabolisme , Extraits de plantes/métabolisme , Quillaja/composition chimique , Ovis aries/métabolisme , Composés organiques volatils/analyse , Animaux , Lignées consanguines d'animaux , Antioxydants/administration et posologie , Antioxydants/effets indésirables , Antioxydants/composition chimique , Antioxydants/métabolisme , Poids , Qualité alimentaire , Stockage des aliments , Peroxydation lipidique , Mâle , Métmyoglobine/analyse , Développement musculaire , Muscles squelettiques/croissance et développement , Pigmentation , Écorce/composition chimique , Extraits de plantes/administration et posologie , Extraits de plantes/effets indésirables , Extraits de plantes/composition chimique , Réfrigération , Ovis aries/croissance et développement , Propriétés de surface , Tunisie , Composés organiques volatils/métabolisme
19.
Meat Sci ; 92(1): 30-5, 2012 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22542075

RÉSUMÉ

Over 72 days, 33 lambs were fed: concentrates in stall (S), grass at pasture for 8 hours (8 h), or grass at pasture for 4 hours in the afternoon (4h-PM). The 4h-PM treatment did not affect the carcass yield compared to the 8h treatment. Meat colour development after blooming was unaffected by the treatments. The 4 h-PM treatment increased the proportion of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA; P<0.0005) and of the highly peroxidizable fatty acids (HP-PUFA; P<0.001) in meat compared to the 8h treatment. The S treatment increased lipid oxidation (higher TBARS values) and impaired colour stability (higher H* values) of meat over storage compared to the 8h and 4 h-PM treatments (P<0.0005 and P=0.003, respectively). No difference in meat oxidative stability was found between the 8h and the 4h-PM treatments. In conclusion, growing lambs can tolerate a restriction of grazing duration without detrimental effects on performances and meat oxidative stability.


Sujet(s)
Aliment pour animaux , Élevage/méthodes , Couleur , Matières grasses alimentaires/métabolisme , Acides gras insaturés/métabolisme , Peroxydation lipidique , Viande/analyse , Animaux , Régime alimentaire , Poaceae , Ovis , Thiobarbituriques/métabolisme
20.
J Anim Sci ; 89(11): 3759-68, 2011 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21705637

RÉSUMÉ

The present study was designed to assess the balance between antioxidant and prooxidant components and the oxidative stability of beef from cattle fed exclusively grazed pasture (PAS) or a barley-based concentrate offered indoors (CONC) for 11 mo, or fed grass silage indoors for a 5-mo winter period, followed for the remaining 6-mo summer period by grazed pasture (SiP) or by grazed pasture plus concentrate at 50% of the dietary DM (SiPC). Muscle prooxidant and antioxidant components were determined by measuring fatty acids and α-tocopherol concentration of LM, respectively. Lipid oxidation and color stability were monitored in ground LM, packaged in a high-oxygen modified atmosphere, over 11 d of refrigerated storage. Vitamin E concentration decreased (P < 0.0005) with an increasing proportion of concentrate in the diet (2.59, 2.45, 1.76, and 1.15 µg/g for PAS, SiP, SiPC, and CONC, respectively). A greater proportion of PUFA was found in LM from cattle in the PAS, SiP, and SiPC groups compared with animals in the CONC group (9.62, 11.04, 8.96, and 6.94%, respectively; P < 0.0005). A greater concentration of highly peroxidizable PUFA was found in LM from heifers in the PAS, SiP, and SiPC groups compared with those in the CONC group (0.84, 0.85, 0.87, and 0.65 mg/g of muscle, respectively; P = 0.02). Dietary treatment affected lipid oxidation (P < 0.0005), with greater 2-thiobarbituric acid reactive substance values in beef from heifers in the SiPC group than in beef from those in the PAS, SiP, and CONC groups. Dietary treatment affected myoglobin oxidation (P = 0.002) during storage, with greater metmyoglobin accumulation in beef from animals receiving concentrate (CONC and SiPC treatments) than in beef from cattle in the PAS and SiP groups. Consequently, feeding concentrate impaired meat color stability over the storage duration, with greater H* (hue angle) values (P < 0.0005) in meat from heifers in the SiPC and CONC groups compared with meat from those in the PAS and SiP groups. The results of the present study confirm a positive effect of grass-based feeding systems on meat color stability compared with concentrate-based dietary strategies. It appears that vitamin E in muscle alone does not explain the resistance of meat to oxidative deterioration because a clear interaction with highly peroxidizable PUFA exists.


Sujet(s)
Élevage/méthodes , Bovins/métabolisme , Régime alimentaire/médecine vétérinaire , Viande/normes , Muscles squelettiques/métabolisme , alpha-Tocophérol/analyse , Aliment pour animaux , Animaux , Acides gras insaturés/sang , Femelle , Métmyoglobine/métabolisme , Poaceae , Répartition aléatoire , Substances réactives à l'acide thiobarbiturique/métabolisme
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