Carcass Composition, Meat Quality, Calpain Activity, Fatty Acid Composition and Ribonucleotide Content in Southern Thai Native Goats and Three-Way Crossbred Goats

dc.contributor.authorChanporn Chaosap
dc.contributor.authorNantana Chauychuwong
dc.contributor.authorRatchasak Chauychuwong
dc.contributor.authorChatchai Sriprem
dc.contributor.authorPanneepa Sivapirunthep
dc.contributor.authorAwis Qurni Sazili
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-21T06:05:23Z
dc.date.issued2021-06-08
dc.description.abstractCarcass composition, meat quality, calpain activity, fatty acid composition, and ribonucleotide content were examined and compared between male Southern Thai native goats (NG, n = 10) and three-way crossbred goats (CG, 50% Boer × 25% Saanen × 25% Southern Thai native, n = 10). All animals were fed 1.5% body weight of concentrate (16% protein and 70% total digestible nutrients) and fresh Napier grass for 4 months. At the end of raising period, the final weight between the two genotypes was not significantly different. The percentage of carcass, bone, and fat of CG were higher than those of NG. NG presented lower shear force values, insoluble and total collagen content but higher collagen solubility and calpain-1 activity at 24 h postmortem. Additionally, NG meat was high in monounsaturated fatty acids but low in saturated fatty acids. However, the amount of ribonucleotide was no significant difference between two genotypes.
dc.identifier.doi10.3390/foods10061323
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.kmitl.ac.th/handle/123456789/10425
dc.subject.classificationMeat and Animal Product Quality
dc.titleCarcass Composition, Meat Quality, Calpain Activity, Fatty Acid Composition and Ribonucleotide Content in Southern Thai Native Goats and Three-Way Crossbred Goats
dc.typeArticle

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