Open-access Formulation of diets for slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages on carcass characteristics and composition of commercial cuts

Abstract

This study was conducted to examine the effects of a diet formulated with industrial amino acids and a commercial vitamin-mineral mixture on the characteristics of carcass and meat cuts of slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages. The experiment involved 600 one-day-old male and female white Naked Neck chicks. The chicks were allotted randomly to a 2 × 3 factorial arrangement consisting of two diets and three slaughter ages, in a completely randomized experimental design with five replicates of 20 birds each. The experimental period was 84 days. Six chicks were selected and slaughtered on the first day, and then at 56, 70 and 84 days of age 10 birds unit was selected and slaughtered per experimental period. Weight and yield of carcass, abdominal fat and breast, thigh and drumstick meat were determined. Additionally, moisture, protein, fat and mineral matter contents and protein and fat deposition in the breast, drumstick and thigh muscles were determined. The diet did not influence the yields of carcass, abdominal fat, or meat cuts or the nutritional composition of meat. Slaughter age influenced the yields of breast and thigh meat and abdominal fat; the protein content of breast meat; and the moisture, crude protein, fat, and mineral matter contents of drumstick and thigh meat. There was an interaction effect between diet and slaughter age for protein deposition in breast meat. The age factor influenced fat deposition in the drumstick muscles. Protein deposition in the thigh muscles was influenced by the diet. Moreover, a difference was observed between the ages for protein and fat deposition in the thigh muscle. In conclusion, the use of a commercial mixture in the diet results in decreased protein deposition in the breast and thigh muscles, although this difference does not affect the characteristics of carcass or meat cuts. Birds slaughtered at 70 days exhibit similar carcass characteristics to those of birds slaughtered at 84 days, indicating the possibility of an earlier slaughter age.

Key words carcass yield; naked neck; nutritional composition; slaughter age

INTRODUCTION

Slow-growing birds have peculiar characteristics, commonly exhibiting different growth curves and rates than commercial poultry lines. Despite their lower production performance and prime-cut yields, the preference of the consumer market for distinguished meat quality attributes such as desirable texture and a more intense color warrants their production (Santos et al. 2005, Attia et al. 2009, 2011, 2017, Dilelis et al. 2019).

The farming of slow-growing chicken thus emerges as an alternative due mainly to the lower necessary investment in facilities and equipment and higher hardiness of those lines, which allow for adjustments in the rearing system (Mutibvu et al. 2017). Research has shown that the husbandry system (intensive or semi-intensive) does not influence performance or meat characteristics (Cruz et al. 2018, Takahashi et al. 2012).

Because it is a viable activity in that it exploits a market niche that seeks differentiated products, it does not compete with the industrial chicken in production scale and cost, but rather in meat quality. Moreover, this segment has shown to be promising, considering that production is viable for small- and medium-sized producers as well as on a commercial scale (Veloso et al. 2014, Moreira et al. 2012).

The use of premix has become the main strategy to meet the nutritional requirements of vitamins and mineral for animals, especially by small farmers. This practice may, however, contribute to inadequate nutrient supply, given the possibility of excess or even lack of the supplied nutrients, which may culminate in production losses.

On the other hand, diets formulated with industrial amino acids properly meet the animal’s requirements, preventing nutrient excesses or deficiencies, providing adequate poultry performance and preventing wastage. However, the high costs of those ingredients may render their use economically unfeasible.

In this scenario, the present study proposes to examine the effect of a diet formulated with industrial amino acids and a commercial vitamin-mineral mixture on the characteristics of carcass and meat cuts of slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The study was developed at the Experimental Laboratory of Poultry Science at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science of the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul, under the approval of the Ethics Committee on Animal Use (CEUA/UFMS; approval no. 996/2018)

Six hundred 1-day-old male and female (mixed lot) white Naked Neck chicks were allotted to a 2 × 3 factorial arrangement consisting of two diets and three slaughter ages in a completely randomized design with five replicates of 20 birds each, totaling 30 experimental units. The birds were grouped by weight (±10% of the average weight of the lot) so that all experimental units would have similar weights.

The experimental diets were based on corn and soybean meal. One of them was formulated to meet the nutritional requirements of brown egg-laying replacement birds, following Rostagno et al. (2017), and including industrial amino acids, while the other included a commercial mineral-vitamin mixture at the levels recommended by the manufacturer (Table I).

Table I
Composition and calculated values of the experimental diets.

The birds were housed in a conventional shed covered by fiber-cement tiles and divided into thirty 2.5-m2 cages on earthen floor covered with pine shavings litter which had been used by a brood. The cages were equipped with electric brooders containing two 100-W incandescent light bulbs for heating, a trough-type feeder and pendulum-type drinkers. Form of feed and water were available ad libitum. After 14 days of age the birds were subjected to 12 hours of natural light. The experiment lasted 84 days.

Six chicks were selected and slaughtered on the first day, and then at 56, 70 and 84 days of age 10 birds whose live weight was similar to the average weight (±10%) of the experimental unit was selected and slaughtered per experimental period to obtain data of body composition and nutrient deposition in the carcass.

The selected birds were placed in cages and deprived of solid feed for 6 h for a complete emptying of their gastrointestinal tract. Subsequently, the birds were weighed individually, stunned by cervical displacement and slaughtered by exsanguination. Thereafter, they were plucked and eviscerated and then their carcass, abdominal fat, head and feet were weighed.

After 24 h of refrigeration, the cuts were deboned, weighed individually, packed in labeled plastic bags and frozen for later processing and to obtain the laboratory samples.

Carcass yield (%) was calculated as the ratio between cold carcass weight and bird weight after fasting, before slaughter: Carcass yield (%) = cold carcass weight (g) × 100 ÷ bird weight before slaughter. Abdominal fat percentage was calculated as the ratio between fat weight and bird weight after fasting, before slaughter: Abdominal fat percentage (%) = Fat weight (g) × 100 ÷ Bird weight before slaughter. The yields of meat cuts were calculated as the ratio between the weight of the deboned cut and cold carcass weight: Meat cut yield (%) = Deboned cut weight × 100 ÷ Cold carcass weight.

The frozen deboned cuts were ground through an industrial meat grinder to obtain homogeneous samples. An aliquot of 60 to 80 g was taken from the total sample and placed on glass petri dishes, pre-dried in a forced-air oven at 105 ºC for 72 h and then processed through a ball mill to obtain a finely ground material for the analyses of definitive dry matter, crude protein, ether extract and mineral matter.

The methodologies described by Silva & Queiroz (2002) were adopted for all centesimal analyses performed in this study. The crude protein values of the samples were obtained by the KJELDAHL method, whereas the ether extract contents were determined by extracting the fat with petroleum ether, using an ANKOM instrument. The ash content was determined after burning the sample in a muffle furnace at 600 ºC for 6 h.

Data were subjected to analysis of variance using SAS software version 9.0, according to statistical model.

Y i j k = µ + D i + S j + ( D S ) i j + e i j k
Y i j k = observation of the characteristic in the birds of the experimental unit k, of diet I and slaughter ages j ;
µ = constant common to all experimental units ;
D i = effect of i-th diet (i=1,2) ;
S j = effect of j-th slaughter ages (j=1, 2, 3) ;
D S i j = interaction effect do i-th diet and j-th slaughter ages ;
e i j k = error associated with observation Yijk; eijk ~ N (0, σ²)

When significant differences were detected, means were compared by Tukey’s test at the 5% probability level.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

The interaction effect between the diet and slaughter age factors was not significant for the carcass and meat characteristics (Table II). The diets provided to the broilers did not elicit changes (P>0.05) in carcass characteristics, probably because they sufficiently met the nutritional requirements of the animals. The nutritional requirements for slow growing birds are not well known. Therefore, it is possible for these strains to take advantage of food nutrients differently from fast-growing birds (Dilelis et al. 2019). Because they are birds with a lower rate of body development, they have a greater proportion of the gastric compartment (Morais et al. 2015), and this anatomical feature can contribute to greater energy use of food, helping the different diets provided in the better adaptation of these strains (Santos et al. 2014). Slaughter age, however, influenced (P<0.05) the carcass characteristics, except for cold carcass yield and drumstick meat yield.

Table II
Weights and yields of cold carcass, meat cuts and abdominal fat of slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

A significant increase was observed for the weight of all components as the birds aged. The increase observed between 56 and 70 days was likely because the animals were in the grower phase, which, in slow-growing chickens, ends at around 70 days. After this period, the protein synthesis and degradation rates are similar, meaning reduced muscle deposition. However, after the growth peak, there is an increase intramuscular fat deposition, which might have contributed to the weight gain observed between 70 and 84 days.

Mueller et al. (2018) observed similar values for the weights of carcass, breast meat, leg meat and abdominal fat in slow-growing broilers slaughtered at 63 days (1677, 335, 687 and 40.8 g, respectively). Siekmann et al. (2018) reported similar weights of carcass, breast meat and leg meat in slow-growing broilers slaughter at 75 days to those obtained in the current study (1799.1, 364.35 and 518.9 g).

The highest yields (P<0.05) of breast and thigh meat were observed at 70 and 84 days. No difference was detected between the results of those days for either cut; however, these values were higher than the yields obtained at 56 days. The lower yield observed at 56 days for breast and thigh meat may be explained by the fact that the animals were still under development and had thus not yet reached maximum growth.

The present results partially agree with those described by Dal Bosco et al. (2014), who observed no influence of slaughter age on the carcass yield of Naked Neck broilers slaughtered at 70 and 84 days. Conversely, Poltowicz & Doktor (2012) observed an increase in the yields of carcass (66.29, 69.07 and 70.66%) and leg meat (19.56, 20.64 and 21.24%) of slow-growing chickens. The lowest values were found at 56 days, and no significant difference was detected between 70 and 84 days.

According to Gordon & Charles (2002), the inflection point for the growth of slow-growing broilers occurs at around the eighth week of age (70 days). Thereafter, protein deposition decreases, which may explain the similar values for the yields of breast and thigh meat at 70 and 84 days. Additionally, the fact that the animals were reared in an intensive system might have reduced stimulus to muscle hypertrophy mainly in the drumstick and thigh, due to little locomotor activity (Lawrie & Ledward 2006, Vieira et al. 2017).

There was a significant increase in the percentage of abdominal fat as slaughter age increased. This may be explained by the higher lipid deposition in older animals, as it increases naturally throughout the growth process, and because fat accumulates later in the abdominal region. In birds, fat is firstly deposited in the neck and gizzard regions, and then in the coelomic cavity (Gonzales & Sartori 2002). Moreover, the rearing system can influence the percentage of abdominal fat due to the higher or lower possibility of the animal performing exercise (Madeira et al. 2010).

No interaction effect was detected (P>0.05) between diet and slaughter age for the centesimal composition of breast meat; differences were only found between the ages, for the protein content of meat (Table III). The highest amount of protein in breast meat was observed at 56 days. At 70 and 84 days, the values for this variable did not differ. No difference was observed for the moisture, fat, or mineral matter contents of breast meat.

Table III
Centesimal composition of breast meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

Faria et al. (2009) found a decrease in the moisture (74.41, 74.22, 73.55 and 73.28%) and protein (23.30, 23.18, 23.03 and 22.56%) contents and an increase in the fat (0.45, 0.60, 0.74 and 0.77%) and mineral matter (1.06, 1.08, 1.10 and 1.22%) contents of breast meat in Naked Neck chickens slaughtered at 65, 75, 85 and 95 days of age, respectively. Castellini et al. (2002) observed no differences in chickens slaughtered at 56 and 85 days of age for the moisture (75.54 and 74.85%), protein (22.39 and 22.34%), fat (1.46 and 2.37%) and mineral matter (0.61 and 0.64%) contents.

The decrease in the protein content of the meat cuts with the advance of age was expected, since younger animals have higher amounts of protein in the muscle and, consequently, in the meat, due to the higher protein synthesis that takes place during this phase. As the bird ages, its protein synthesis rate declines until it reaches basal levels (Schiaffino et al. 2013, Attia et al. 2017).

No increases were observed for the breast meat fat content, which is probably due to the predominant type of fiber in the meat of this cut. Type-IIB fibers have energy utilization pathways that depend on the use of carbohydrate and utilize glycogen as an energy substrate. Therefore, they do not store fat, which results in a lower lipid content in breast meat (Vieira 2014, Vieira et al. 2017).

There was no interaction effect (P>0.05) between the factors for the any of the variables evaluated in the analysis of centesimal composition of drumstick meat. However, slaughter age influenced (P<0.05) its moisture, crude protein, ether extract and mineral matter contents (Table IV).

Table IV
Centesimal composition of the drumstick meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

Moisture and mineral matter contents decreased as the birds aged. The opposite response was shown by the protein and fat contents in the meat at 70 days, which decreased and increased, respectively. However, an unexpected response was seen at 84 days, when the protein content increased and the lipid content did not differ in comparison to the other ages.

Overall, the protein and lipid contents of muscle are expected to decrease and increase, respectively, as the bird ages. This is due to the different growth rates of body tissues, with older animals showing higher fat and lower protein deposition rates.

Santos et al. (2012) observed an increase in the lipid content of drumstick meat of slow-growing broilers slaughtered at 75, 85 and 110 days (2.23, 2.32 and 2.68%). However, the protein (19.94, 19.43 and 19.62%) and mineral matter (1.00, 1.00 and 0.93%) contents did not differ between the ages. Additionally, meat moisture decreased (77.42, 76.62 and 76.69%).

There was no interaction effect (P>0.05) between diet and slaughter age on the composition of thigh meat (Table V). The lowest (P<0.05) values for moisture, crude protein and mineral matter were observed at 84 days of age. However, similar values were found at 56 and 70 days. The lowest (P<0.05) fat content in thigh meat was observed at 70 days, whereas no difference was detected for this variable between 56 and 84 days.

Table V
Centesimal composition of thigh meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

Castellini et al. (2002), on the other hand, observed no influence of slaughter age on the moisture (76.02 and 75.39%), protein (19.01 and 19.06%), fat (4.46 and 5.01) and mineral matter (0.51 and 0.54%) contents of thigh meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at 56 or 81 days of age.

The observed increase in fat content in drumstick and thigh meat with the advance of age may be a favorable finding, since intra- or intermuscular fat is associated with greater juiciness and tenderness of meat (Warris 2000, Attia et al. 2011, Vieira 2014). Fat deposition is highly marked in the thigh and drumstick, as these are regions where fat storage is important. This is mainly because of their locomotor function, which leads to a predominance of type-I fibers in those limbs (Vieira 2014).

There was an interaction effect (P<0.05) between the diet and age factors for protein deposition in breast meat. However, no significant differences were detected for fat deposition in that meat cut (Table VI). The formulated diet provided the highest protein deposition at 56 and 84 days. At 70 days, no difference was observed between the diets. When the broilers received the formulated diet, no differences were observed for protein deposition at the three ages. By contrast, in the diet containing the mineral-vitamin mixture, protein deposition was highest at 70 days, whereas no difference was observed between 56 and 84 days, whose results did not differ from each other. There was no significant difference for fat deposition in breast meat.

Table VI
Protein and fat deposition in breast meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

The interaction effect between diet and slaughter age was not significant for protein and fat deposition in thigh meat (Table VIII). Protein deposition in thigh meat was highest (P<0.05) at 70 days, with similar values detected between 56 and 84 days. Fat deposition rose with age, with the lowest deposition observed at 56 days and the highest at 84 days. At 70 days, the results did not differ from those observed at the other days.

Table VII
Protein and fat deposition in drumstick meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.
Table VIII
Protein and fat deposition in thigh meat from slow-growing broilers slaughtered at different ages.

Considering that the peak growth of slow-growing broilers occurs at around 70 days, greater protein deposition is expected in this phase, as observed in this study for the breast and thigh cuts. However, the birds fed the formulated diet showed greater protein deposition in those muscles, which is likely a result of the adequate nutritional supply from that diet, which met the animals’ requirements.

The association between the diet and slaughter age factors did not influence (P>0.05) the deposition of protein or fat in drumstick meat (Table VII). Protein deposition in breast meat was similar at the different ages, but fat deposition was highest (P<0.05) at 70 days.

The fat present in the muscle is deposited at a faster rate after peak muscle development, since intermuscular fat deposition is highest in the period preceding this peak. After the peak, intramuscular fat deposition increases (Lawrie & Ledward 2006), as observed for the deposition of fat in thigh meat. No difference was observed for fat deposition in breast meat, probably because the fibers that predominate in this cut are type-II and thus store a small amount of fat.

CONCLUSION

Dietary inclusion of a commercial mineral-supplement mixture reduces protein deposition in the breast and thigh muscles; however, this difference does not affect the characteristics of carcass or meat cuts. Birds slaughtered at 70 days have similar carcass characteristics to those of birds slaughtered at 84 days, indicating the possibility of an earlier slaughter age.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was financed in part by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior – Brazil (CAPES) – Finance Code 001 and the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul (UFMS, Brazil).

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    11 Dec 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    14 Nov 2019
  • Accepted
    7 Dec 2020
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