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Short communication. Fatty acid composition of lamb fat depots as an origin discriminator
Author(s) -
M. Juárez,
A. Horcada,
María Jesús Alcalde Aldea,
Noelia Aldai,
O. Polvillo,
M. Valera,
A. Molina
Publication year - 1970
Publication title -
spanish journal of agricultural research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.337
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 2171-9292
pISSN - 1695-971X
DOI - 10.5424/sjar/2010084-1392
Subject(s) - intramuscular fat , weaning , composition (language) , subcutaneous fat , fatty acid , biology , food science , zoology , biochemistry , adipose tissue , philosophy , linguistics
The development of quality labels for different lamb meats makes necessary to implement analytical methodologies to guarantee consumers the origin of the products. Eighty single birth male lambs from five Southern Spain sheep breeds (Grazalema Merino, Churra Lebrijana, Spanish Merino, Montesina and Segurena) were selected for the study and fed according to their traditional production system (with or without weaning). The fatty acid composition of five different depots (intramuscular, intermuscular, subcutaneous, omental and kidney knob) was analyzed by gas chromatography, showing a high variability among lamb types. The lipid profile of single fat depots was not able to assign 100% of the carcasses to their origin, but using the information from two depots (including intramuscular, or combining an external and an internal fat depot) led to a reliability of 100%. Any combination of 3, 4 or 5 depots also obtained 100% correct discrimination.

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