Abstract :
This study investigated the effects of various stunning methods on the quality of French ‘foie gras’ in ducks and geese. The ducks
(n530 per group) were stunned with one of the following techniques: electrical stunning in a water bath (50 Hz AC, 130mA,
4 s), head-only electrical stunning (50 Hz AC, 600mA, 4 s), mechanical stunning (captive bolt) and controlled atmosphere stunning
(CAS: phase 1, CO2 (40%)–O2 (30%)–N2 (30%), for 2min followed by phase 2, CO2 .85% in air, for 2min). The same methods
(except head-only stunning which was not applied) were used in geese (n540 per group). The weight of the liver at slaughter
was not affected by the stunning techniques, neither was its colour (L*, a*, b* coordinates), despite the differences in bleeding
rate between the stunning treatments. The loss of fat during the cooking of canned fatty liver did not depend upon stunning
treatment. Some appearance defects of raw fatty livers were significantly affected by the treatment: mechanical and head-only
stunning induced higher incidence of petechial haemorrhages in duck liver, whereas in geese, incidence of superficial
haemorrhages was significantly higher after CAS and water-bath stunning. The calculation of an overall score based on the
incidence and severity of the different appearance defects observed in the present experiment showed that CAS was associated
with the least favourable position in ducks as well as in geese, compared to the other treatments. The commercial grading of
ducks and geese fatty livers, carried out by an expert from the industry, clearly showed the detrimental effect of CAS on the
commercial value of raw livers. CAS, under the conditions applied in the present work cannot be recommended, because of its
drastic effect on liver quality. The underlying mechanisms deserve further investigations
Keywords :
Quality , Ducks , geese , foie gras , stunning method