Abstract :
Food waste from fish and fruit shops was used as an alternative to the grain in grower-finisher pig diets. Two diets were
formulated on an iso-nutrient basis (14 MJ digestible energy per kg, 160 g crude protein per kg on a dry-matter basis) to contain
0 g of food waste per kg in the control diet and 50 g of fish-shop waste per kg and 120 g of fruit-shop waste per kg in the
experimental diet. In the study, 28 pigs per diet (seven pigs per pen) were fed ad libitum from 20 kg to 100 kg, then, they were
slaughtered and the carcass characteristics determined. The inclusion of food waste in the diet had no significant effect
(P . 0.05) on average daily feed intake (2.12 v. 2.20 kg/day), average daily gain (0.74 v. 0.78 kg/day), or gain/feed (0.35 v.
0.35 kg per kg). In the case of the experimental diet, backfat thickness was significantly lower (18.0 v. 21.3 mm, P , 0.01).
The results of the taste test indicated that the meat from food waste-fed pigs had acceptable organoleptic quality although a very
light aroma to fish was observed in the bacon (P , 0.01).
It was concluded that food waste from the fish and fruit shops could be included in grower-finisher pig diets without any
detrimental effect on growth performance and only minor effects on carcass characteristics and meat quality
Keywords :
Feed composition tables , Food waste , meat quality , pigs