Abstract :
The aim of this work was to improve the knowledge on young suckled Salers bull production and to study the effect of forage
type and concentrate level on performance, carcass and muscle characteristics as well as on meat quality. Twenty-four Salers
male calves of 150 days of age were assigned to six groups: C0 (fed exclusively with hay and dam’s milk and slaughtered at
approximately 6 months of age), and HH (hay – high concentrate), HL (hay – low concentrate), GH (cut grass – high
concentrate), GL (cut grass – low concentrate) and CP (control pasture: pasture – high concentrate) groups differing in feeds
received until slaughter and slaughtered unweaned at approximately 10 months of age. Carcass weights averaged 210 kg at
10 months of age at slaughter. Average daily weight gain (ADWG) in HH and GH groups tended to be higher (P50.09) than
in HL and GL groups (1354 v. 1248 g/day). ADWG in CP group (1542 g/day) was higher (P,0.05) than in the other groups.
Carcass weight in CP group (230 kg) tended to be higher (P,0.1) than in HL (198 kg) and GL (200 kg) groups. Carcass muscle
weight was higher (P,0.05) in GH (155 kg) and CP groups (165 kg) than in HL (141 kg) and GL (142 kg) groups. Carcass and
offal fatty tissue weights and carcass fatness did not differ between groups. Neither forage type nor concentrate level had
significant effect on the area of muscle fibres or on muscle metabolic enzyme activities (namely, lactate dehydrogenase – LDH,
phosphofructokinase – PFK, isocitrate dehydrogenase – ICDH, citrate synthase – CS and cytochrome-c oxidase – COX).
semitendinosus muscle of CP group presented higher CS enzyme activities (8.10 mmol/min per g) than HH (5.30 mmol/min per
g) and GL (4.52 mmol/min per g) groups. Neither total nor insoluble collagen content significantly differed between groups.
Lipid content in rectus abdominis muscle was relatively low (average 67.5 mg/g dry matter) and was not affected by diet
(P.0.05). The ratio between n-6 and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid content was lower (P50.01) in the low-concentrate-fed
than in the high-concentrate-fed group (3.95 v. 5.37, respectively). Sensory analysis noted that longissimus thoracis muscle from
CP animals was more tender and juicy than that from HH and GH animals (P,0.05).
Keywords :
forage type , suckled bulls , meat quality , Concentrates , Carcass