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Provedor de dados:  Sci. Agrar.Paran. / SAP
País:  Brazil
Título:  RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DIETARY FIBER TYPES AND THE PIG MEAT QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE CHARACTERISTICS
Fiber sources in pigs feeding
Autores:  Oliveira, Aparecida Costa
Martins, Terezinha Domiciano Dantas
Souza, Carla Giselly de
Pavlak, Maira Suzana Dürrewald
Almeida, Jorge Luiz Santos de
Pinto, Alex Ferreira
Paulo, Paula Frassinetti Medeiros de
Data:  2017-07-14
Ano:  2017
Palavras-chave:  Meat quality
Non-starch polysaccharides
Performance
Pigs.
Resumo:  The trend observed in the meatpacking industry is the heavier pigs slaughter, this practice is operational cost savings such as logistics, infrastructure and manpower. With heavier pigs slaughter the industry achieve greater meat quantity, dilute the company costs and at the same time, enhance the noble meats value. This review aims to demonstrate the dietary fiber effects on quantitative and qualitative pig carcass characteristics and the factors that can affect these parameters. Corn and soybeans are the major contents for pigs feed; however, these grains are used in human food. The biggest challenge is maintain the livestock production efficiency using alternative foods, improving carcass characteristics and reducing costs. Studies on these foods potential in pigs production also is linked to the consumer market desires, pork with low fat. The fiber fraction in the ingredients can affect important nutritional characteristics in pigs. The nutritional and physiological fiber effects depend not only on the cell wall constituents incorporated into the diet, but also its chemical and structural composition and the way it is associated with other nutrients. Studies with soluble and insoluble dietary fiber use in pig feed have significant advances in identifying fiber sources terms and the functions exercised on the carcass qualities.

The trend in the industry is the slaughter of heavier pigs, where slaughterhouses obtain more meat per hour worked, dilute fixed costs, and intensify the value added of prime meat. This allows the operational costs of logistics, infrastructure and labor reduction. The objective of this review was to demonstrate the effects of dietary fiber on aspects related to the pigs’ carcass quantitative and qualitative characteristics and the factors that affect these parameters. Corn and soybeans are the pig feed major constituents; however, they are used in human food. The biggest challenge is to maintain the animal production efficiency, using alternative foods that do not compete directly with human food. The nutritional and physiological effects of fiber depend not only on the amount of cell wall constituents incorporated into the diet, but on its chemical and structural composition and the way it is physically associated with other nutrients. Studies using soluble and insoluble dietary fiber in pig diets have significant advances in the identification of fiber sources and their functions on meat quality.
Tipo:  Info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Idioma:  Português
Identificador:  http://e-revista.unioeste.br/index.php/scientiaagraria/article/view/15456
Editor:  Scientia Agraria Paranaensis
Relação:  http://e-revista.unioeste.br/index.php/scientiaagraria/article/view/15456/11515
Formato:  application/pdf
Fonte:  Scientia Agraria Paranaensis; Vol. 16, No 2 (2017); 145-152

1983-1471
Direitos:  http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
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