Artificial Raising on Milk Replacer and Finishing Diet Did Not Affect Color and Oxidative Stability of Longissimus Lumborum Muscles From Polypay Ram Lambs

Koushik Mondal, Surendranath P. Suman, Katherine G. Purvis, Gregg Rentfrow, Donald G. Ely, Brittany E. Davis, Jennifer Weinert-Nelson, Yifei Wang, Ana Paula A.A. Salim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Lamb production traits are affected by pre-weaning management (such as artificial raising on milk replacer) and finishing (forage vs. concentrate) strategies. The objective of the current study was to examine the effects of pre-weaning management and finishing systems on the color and oxidative stability of longissimus lumborum (LL) muscles from ram lambs. Polypay ram lambs were raised conventionally with ewes (CR; n = 10) or artificially on milk replacer (AR; n = 10). After weaning at 60 d, ram lambs in AR and CR were equally divided and randomly allocated to finishing on a high-forage (50:50 forage:concentrate; HF) or a high-concentrate (85:15 concentrate:forage; HC) diet until reaching the live weight of 59 kg. The lambs were harvested, and the LL muscles from both sides of the carcasses (24 h postmortem) were fabricated into 2.5-cm-thick chops. Carcass characteristics were evaluated while harvesting and fabricating. The chops were placed on polystyrene trays, overwrapped with oxygen-permeable polyvinyl chloride film, and randomly assigned to refrigerated storage (2°C) in the darkness for either 0, 3, or 6 d. Instrumental color, R630/580, pH, lipid oxidation, and metmyoglobin reducing ability (MRA) were evaluated at the end of each storage period. Pre-weaning management and finishing system (HF and HC) had no influence (P > 0.05) on the carcass characteristics, surface L* (lightness), a* (redness), b* (yellow-ness), R630/580, pH, and MRA of LL chops. The R630/580 and MRA decreased (P < 0.05) during storage in both CR and AR chops, whereas lipid oxidation and yellowness (b* value) increased (P < 0.05) in both CR and AR during storage. These findings suggested that milk replacer could be employed as a practical strategy in lamb production without com-promising fresh lamb color.

Original languageEnglish
Article number18343
JournalMeat and Muscle Biology
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Mondal, et al.

Funding

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture\u2013Agricultural Research Service, National Program 101, Food Animal Production (ARS Project 5042-32630-004-00D).

FundersFunder number
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Food Animal Production Project
USDA-Agricultural Research Service5042-32630-004-00D
USDA-Agricultural Research Service

    Keywords

    • artificial raising
    • color stability
    • lamb color
    • milk replacer

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Animal Science and Zoology
    • Food Science

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