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      The effects of Moringa peregrina seed meal, autoclaving, and/or exogenous enzyme cocktail on performance, carcass traits, meat quality, and blood lipids of broilers

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          Abstract

          The effects of Moringa peregrina seed meal (MPSM), autoclaving, and/or enzyme cocktail addition on performance, profitability, carcass traits, meat quality, and blood lipids of broilers between 1 and 35 d of age were investigated. Seven experimental diets were employed: the control 0% MPSM, 10% raw MPSM, 10% autoclaved MPSM (at a temperature of 120°C and 1 kg/cm 2 pressure for 30 min), 10% raw MPSM supplemented with enzymes at 0.1 or 0.2 g/kg feed, and 10% autoclaved MPSM supplemented with the same previous enzymes and doses. Each diet was fed to 8 replicates with 5 broilers in each. At the end of the experiment, 3 broilers from each replicate were randomLy chosen to determine carcass traits, meat quality, and blood lipids. Findings at 35 d of age indicated that all 10% raw MPSM treatments with or without enzymes addition impaired growth, feed conversion (FCR), and profitability ( p < 0.05), but increased feed intake ( p < 0.05) and did not affect mortality when compared with the control group. The 10% autoclaved MPSM treatments with or without enzymes addition increased feed intake ( p < 0.05) when compared with the control group, inducing growth equal to the control group ( p > 0.05), and improving FCR and profitability. Enzymes addition to raw MPSM did not produce positive effects ( p < 0.05), and no additive effect was observed when autoclaving and enzymes addition were combined ( p > 0.05) as compared to the autoclaving group. Carcass traits, meat quality, and blood lipids were not significantly affected by MPSM, autoclaving, and enzymes addition. However, intestine, cecum, and gizzard percentages increased ( p < 0.05) with all 10% raw MPSM treatments, while all 10% autoclaved MPSM treatments could return these values ( p > 0.05) to the control group, except with gizzard, which exhibited less improvement. Additionally, all autoclaved groups had lower meat pH measured 24 h postmortem ( p <0.05) compared to the control group. In conclusion, autoclaved MPSM can be included in broilers’ diets at a 10% level without negative effects on performance, carcass traits, meat quality, and blood lipids. This indicates that autoclaving alone is adequate.

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          Plant food anti-nutritional factors and their reduction strategies: an overview

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            Determinants of broiler chicken meat quality and factors affecting them: a review

            Broiler production at mass level has already been achieved and now emphasis is being laid on increasing meat quality by altering various characteristics of broiler meat. Appearance, texture, juiciness, wateriness, firmness, tenderness, odor and flavor are the most important and perceptible meat features that influence the initial and final quality judgment by consumers before and after purchasing a meat product. The quantifiable properties of meat such as water holding capacity, shear force, drip loss, cook loss, pH, shelf life, collagen content, protein solubility, cohesiveness, and fat binding capacity are indispensable for processors involved in the manufacture of value added meat products. Nutrition of birds has a significant impact on poultry meat quality and safety. It is well known that dietary fatty acid profiles are reflected in tissue fatty acid. Management of poultry meat production is reflected mostly on consumption features (juiciness, tenderness, flavour) of meat. After slaughter, biochemical changes, causing the conversion of muscle to meat, determine final meat quality. Postmortem carcass temperature has profound effect on rigor mortis and the physicochemical changes observed in PSE muscles are attributed to postmortem glycolysis, temperature, and pH. Primary processing and further processing have become a matter of concern with respect to nutritional quality of broiler meat. Genetic variation among birds could contribute to large differences in the rate of rigor mortis completion and meat quality. Heritability estimates for meat quality traits in broilers are amazingly high (0.35-0.81), making genetic selection a best tool for improvement of broiler meat quality.
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              The effect of broiler breast meat color on pH, moisture, water-holding capacity, and emulsification capacity.

              The relationship between broiler breast meat color and pH, moisture content, water-holding capacity (WHC), and emulsification capacity (EC) was investigated. In each of three replicate trials, fillets were collected from three different commercial processing plants according to breast meat lightness (L*) values as follows: lighter than normal (light, L* > 53), normal (48 < L* < 53), and darker than normal (dark, L* < 46). Color values of lightness (L*), redness (a*), and yellowness (b*) were measured at 0 and 24 h after collection. Fillets were then ground and homogenized prior to determining color, pH, moisture, WHC, and EC of the ground meat. There was a significant difference among the three color groups (light, normal, and dark) in L*, a*, pH, WHC, and EC. The L* values of whole raw breast fillets had significant negative correlation coefficients with ground meat EC (-0.9237), pH (-0.9610), and a* (-0.6540). Emulsification capacity had significant positive correlations with pH (0.9572) and water-holding capacity (0.7080). WHC had significant correlations with a* (0.8143), moisture (-0.7647), and pH (0.7963). Lighter-than-normal meat was associated with low pH, high moisture, low EC, and low WHC. These results indicate that wide differences in raw breast meat color exist and that these differences may be used by poultry further processors as an indicator of fillets with altered functional properties.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Vet Sci
                Front Vet Sci
                Front. Vet. Sci.
                Frontiers in Veterinary Science
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                2297-1769
                05 July 2023
                2023
                : 10
                : 1158468
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Department of Agriculture, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, King Abdulaziz University , Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
                [2] 2Department of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Production, University of Napoli Federico II , Napoli, Italy
                Author notes

                Edited by: Damiano Cavallini, University of Bologna, Italy

                Reviewed by: Giovanni Buonaiuto, University of Bologna, Italy; Sabreen Ezzat Fadl, Matrouh University, Egypt

                *Correspondence: Mohammed A. Al-Harthi, malharthi@ 123456kau.edu.sa

                †ORCID: Mohammed A. Al-Harthi, https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0801-0399

                Article
                10.3389/fvets.2023.1158468
                10354260
                d32bee47-c0db-4477-814a-a849b357521d
                Copyright © 2023 Al-Harthi, Attia, Elgandy and Bovera.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 03 February 2023
                : 11 April 2023
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 11, Equations: 0, References: 130, Pages: 18, Words: 17744
                Categories
                Veterinary Science
                Original Research
                Custom metadata
                Animal Nutrition and Metabolism

                moringa peregrina seed meal,autoclaving,enzyme cocktail,broilers,performance,body metabolism

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