UK: New methods may improve pork quality assessments

Published 2024년 11월 25일

Tridge summary

PhD candidate Paweł Piotr Suliga has developed new methods to assess pork meat quality, potentially outperforming existing tools and addressing issues arising from rapidly growing animals in the meat industry. His methods, which include bioimpedance testing and histopathology, have linked PSE-like defects to sudden muscle tissue breakdown and may lead to the identification of genetic markers associated with these defects. Suliga has also assessed fresh pork quality, focusing on factors such as pH, water holding capacity, and color, which can be influenced by various factors including handling, genetic predisposition, stress, and diet.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

In his PhD thesis, Paweł Piotr Suliga has developed new methods to assess pork meat quality. His methods could potentially outperform existing monitoring tools, tackling the growing quality issues in the meat industry. Pork production and demand have been steadily increasing globally the past decades. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), pork meat production was estimated to rise by 11.2% in 2021, equating to 122 million tons compared to 2020. However, the global push for rapidly growing animals has raised concerns about genetic variation and the predisposition for meat defects. While this shift has improved certain meat attributes such as low fat content, this can also reduce flavor. “Meat quality abnormalities have emerged as a costly problem for the industry,” PhD candidate Paweł Piotr Suliga explains. These abnormalities, linked to various underlying causes, manifest as inferior pork quality characterized by loose texture, ...
Source: Thepigsite

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