Login / Signup

Pasture-finishing of bison improves animal metabolic health and potential health-promoting compounds in meat.

Stephan van VlietAmanda D BlairLydia M HiteJennifer ClowardRobert E WardCarter KruseHerman A van WietmarchsenNick van EekerenScott L KronbergFrederick D Provenza
Published in: Journal of animal science and biotechnology (2023)
Pasture-finishing (i.e., grass-fed) broadly improves bison metabolic health and accumulates additional potential health-promoting compounds in their meat compared to concentrate finishing in confinement (i.e., pen-finished). Our data, however, does not indicate that meat from pen-finished bison is therefore unhealthy. The studied bison meat-irrespective of finishing practice-contained favorable omega 6:3 ratios (< 3.2), and amino acid and vitamin profiles. Our study represents one of the deepest meat profiling studies to date (> 1500 unique compounds), having revealed previously unrecognized differences in animal metabolic health and nutritional composition because of finishing mode. Whether observed nutritional differences have an appreciable effect on human health remains to be determined.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • risk assessment
  • mental health
  • health information
  • amino acid
  • primary care
  • quality improvement
  • machine learning
  • social media