Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-xm8r8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-21T16:20:21.007Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effects of selection for low backfat thickness in pigs on the sites of tissue deposition in the body

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

J. D. Wood
Affiliation:
ARC Meat Research Institute, Langford, Bristol BS18 7DY
O. P. Whelehan
Affiliation:
ARC Meat Research Institute, Langford, Bristol BS18 7DY
M. Ellis
Affiliation:
Faculty of Agriculture, The University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
W. C. Smith
Affiliation:
Faculty of Agriculture, The University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
R. Laird
Affiliation:
West of Scotland College of Agriculture, Auchincruive, Ayr KA6 5HW
Get access

Abstract

The effects of selection for low backfat thickness on tissue deposition in different body sites has been investigated in pigs. Eight castrated male and eight female pigs from each of the selection and control lines maintained at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne were used. One castrated male and one female from each line was killed at 15, 30, 45, 60, 75, 90, 105 and 120 kg live weight following ad libitum food consumption and fully dissected.

There were only small effects of line on carcass composition, selected pigs having 120 g/kg more bone than controls at the mean side weight (P < 0·001) and 40 g/kg more lean (NS). At the same mean weight of subcutaneous fat, selected pigs had thinner backfat than controls (approximately 3 mm) over m. longissimus at the last rib and over the shoulder but not at the mid-rump or mid-back positions. There appears to have been a slight shift in the sites of fat deposition from above m. longissimus in the loin towards the mid-line and rump as a result of selection, even though mid-rump, C and K measurements were all included in the selection index. However, there was no difference between the lines in the weight distribution of subcutaneous fat between six regions and so these shifts must have been very localized. There was no difference between lines in the relationship between P2 fat thickness and proportion of lean in the side.

The effects of selection on the sites of deposition within tissues other than subcutaneous fat were small. In particular there was no evidence that selection has caused relocation of body fat from subcutaneous to the other sites.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Berg, R. T., Andersen, B. B. and Liboriussen, T. 1978. Growth of bovine tissues. 2. Genetic influences on muscle growth and distribution in young bulls. Anim. Prod. 27: 5161.Google Scholar
Brown, A. J. and Williams, D. R. 1977. Pig carcass evaluation — measurement of composition using anatomical dissection. Memo. Meat Res. Inst., No. 33.Google Scholar
Brown, A. J. and Wood, J. D. 1979. Pig carcass evaluation — measurement of composition using a standardised butchery method. Memo. Meat Res. Inst., No. 42.Google Scholar
Butler-Hogg, B. W. and Wood, J. D. 1982. The partition of body fat in British Friesian and Jersey steers. Anim. Prod. 35: 253262.Google Scholar
Butterfield, R. M. 1963. Relative growth of the musculature of the ox. In Carcase Composition and Appraisal of Meat Animals (ed. Tribe, D. E.), pp. 7.17.20. Commonwealth. Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Chadwick, J. P. 1977. Selection for economy of production and carcass lean content in Large White pigs and its influence on meat quality characteristics. Ph.D. Thesis, Univ. Newcastle upon Tyne.Google Scholar
Davies, A. S. 1974a. A comparison of tissue development in Pietrain and Large White pigs from birth to 64 kg live weight. 1. Growth changes in carcass composition. Anim. Prod. 19: 367376.Google Scholar
Davies, A. S. 1974b. A comparison of tissue development in Pietrain and Large White pigs from birth to 64 kg live weight. 2. Growth changes in muscle distribution. Anim. Prod. 19: 377387.Google Scholar
Evans, D. G. and Kempster, A. J. 1979. The effects of genotype, sex and feeding regimen on pig carcass development. 1. Primary components, tissues and joints. J. agric. Sci., Camb. 93: 339347.Google Scholar
Gregory, N. G., Wood, J. D., Enser, M., Smith, W. C. and Ellis, M. 1980. Fat mobilisation in Large White pigs selected for low backfat thickness. J. Sci. Fd Agric. 31: 567572.Google Scholar
Henderson, Ruth, Whittemore, C. T., Ellis, M., Smith, W. C. and Laird, R. 1980. Comparison of the Newcastle Large White control and selection line pigs on a fixed feed, fixed time trial. Anim. Prod. 30: 464 (Abstr.).Google Scholar
Henderson, Ruth, Whittemore, C. T., Ellis, M., Smith, W. C. and Laird, R. 1981. Comparison of the Newcastle Large White control and selection line pigs on an appetite feeding trial. Anim. Prod. 32: 360 (Abstr.).Google Scholar
Jones, S. D. M., Richmond, R. J., Price, M. A. and Berg, R. B. 1980. Effects of breed and sex on the patterns of fat deposition and distribution in swine. Can. J. Anim. Sci. 60: 223230.Google Scholar
Kempster, A. J. 1981. The problem of breed bias in commercial carcass classification and grading. Anim. Prod. 32: 360361 (Abstr.).Google Scholar
Kempster, A. J. and Evans, D. G. 1979. The effects of genotype, sex and feeding regimen on pig carcass development. 2. Tissue weight distribution and fat partition between depots. J. agric. Sci., Camb. 93: 349358.Google Scholar
Reid, J. T. 1972. Body composition of animals: interspecific, sex and age peculiarities, and the influence of nutrition. In Festskrift til. Knut Breirem, pp. 213238. Mariendals Boktrykkeri A.s Gjovik, Oslo.Google Scholar
Wolf, B. T. 1982. An analysis of the variation in the lean tissue distribution of sheep. Anim. Prod. 34: 257264.Google Scholar
Wood, J. D. and Butler-hogg, B. W. 1982. Deposition of fat and its partition between the major fat depots in meat animals. J. Sci. Fd Agric. 33: 810811.Google Scholar
Wood, J. D. and Enser, M. 1982. Comparison of boars and castrates for bacon production. 2. Composition of muscle and subcutaneous fat, and changes in side weight during curing. Anim. Prod. 35: 6574.Google Scholar