Agriculturae Conspectus Scientificus, Vol 76, No 3 (2011)

Differences in Carcass and Meat Quality between Organically Reared Cocks and Capons

Marko VOLK, Jernej MALENŠEK, Maja PREVOLNIK, Martin ŠKRLEP, Blaž ŠEGULA, Marjeta ČANDEK-POTOKAR, Martina BAVEC

Pages: 153-156

Summary


The aim of the present study was to compare carcass and meat quality traits of ecologically reared capons and cocks. The experiment comprised 60 layer-type Slovenian hybrid Prelux-G chickens. Half of the animals were caponized at the age of 52 days (app. 0.5 kg body mass) and another half were left entire males. All chickens were reared on the same farm respecting requirements for ecological farming. Chickens were fed commercial feed mixtures combined with the free access to pasture. After the slaughter (185 days), the chickens were dissected and main carcass parts were weighed. Meat quality (pH, colour, water-holding capacity) and chemical composition (protein, water, intramuscular fat) were determined. Birds of both groups had similar weight of carcass and body parts, except for weight of the thighs with drumsticks and off al weight, which were significantly lower in capons. The main differences in carcass traits appeared in the abdominal fat tissue. Capons had more abdominal fat. Meat physico-chemical characteristics (pH, drip loss) were similar in both groups, except for the colour. Capons had lighter (higher Minolta L*value) and less red (lower Minolta a* value) colour of meat as cocks. There was no difference between capons and cocks in the content of muscle proteins, water and intramuscular fat.

Keywords


poultry; caponization; carcass quality; meat quality

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