TY - JOUR
T1 - Pigmentation and Meat Quality of Broiler Chickens Fed Maize Replaced with Panicum maximum with or Without Roxazyme-G And Ronozyme-P Supplementation
AU - , T.A. Oluwasola AU - , G.E. Onibi AU - , J.O. Agbede
JO - Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances
VL - 7
IS - 6
SP - 663
EP - 668
PY - 2008
DA - 2001/08/19
SN - 1680-5593
DO - javaa.2008.663.668
UR - https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?doi=javaa.2008.663.668
KW - Broiler chickens
KW -Panicum maximum leaf meal
KW -maize
KW -meat quality
KW -roxazyme-G
KW -ronozyme-P
AB - Carcasses and meat from a flock of 240 broiler chickens in which 15% of the dietary maize was replaced with Panicum maximum leaf meal with or without Roxazyme-G and Ronozyme-P supplementation at 100 and 200 mg kg 1 were assessed pigmentation, taste, water and lipid contents and oxidative stability during refrigerated storage. Shank and skin pigmentation scores significantly (p<0.05) increased with increasing levels of either or combination of the enzymes in the Panicum maximum containing diets. The taste scores of meat were not affected (p>0.05) by diet and interaction of diet and muscle types (breast, drumstick and thigh). Taste scores were significant (p<0.05) for muscle types (6.2±2.1, 6.1±2.2 and 6.9±1.7 for thigh, drumstick and breast, respectively). Moisture content of meat was not significantly (p>0.05) influenced by diets and lipid contents were 5.5±0.3, 5.0±0.2 and 4.6±0.2 for thigh, drumstick and breast (p<0.05). Oxidative stability of meat, though significant (p<0.05), showed no trend in relation to diets. Meat susceptibility to oxidation was in order of thigh>drumstick>breast. Partial substitution of maize with Panicum maximum with or without enzyme supplementation had no adverse effect on meat quality.
ER -