P. Hernandez et al., Relationships between meat quality measurements in rabbits fed with three diets of different fat type and content, MEAT SCI, 55(4), 2000, pp. 379-384
Two hundred and eighty-four, genetically similar (a three-way cross), young
rabbits were fed ad libitum, from weaning, either a commercial diet (group
C, ether extract 2.6%) or a diet containing vegetable fat (group V, ether
extract, 9.9%) or animal fat (group A, ether extract 11.7%). A principal co
mponent (PC) analysis was performed with the variables: ultimate pH at 24 h
post mortem measured in the longissimus dor si (LD) and in the biceps femo
ris (BF) muscles, colour measured on the surface of the loin, fatty acid co
mposition of perirenal fat, meat fat content of the hind leg, water holding
capacity and cooking losses of the meat, and sensory variables determined
by a trained panel test. The four first PC explained 62% of the total varia
tion (27, 13, 11 and 11%, respectively). The first PC grouped the fatty aci
ds, the second PC grouped the sensorial variables, and the third and fourth
PCs grouped the pHs and the water holding capacity. The projection of the
data in the first two PCs showed three separate groups of points. Animals f
ed with diet V were on the left side of the graph, where the variable C18:2
lies, whereas animals fed with diets A and C lay on the right side of the
graph, where the saturated acids were grouped. These were slightly separate
d by the higher content of oleic acid in the animals fed with diet A. The s
econd PC, where the sensorial variables were grouped, did not separate the
animals fed with diets A, V and C. The diets used in this experiment had on
ly a slight influence on the organoleptic characteristics of rabbit meat. (
C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.