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Antioxidant action of yerba mate on carcass and meat characteristics and fatty acid profile in meat and fat of lambs finished in tropical pastures.

Vinicius Roa BaerleyCamila Celeste Brandão Ferreira ItavoLuis Carlos Vinhas ItavoCarlos Eduardo Domingues NazárioMarina de Nadai Bonin GomesGelson Dos Santos DifanteGeraldo Tadeu Dos SantosGleice Kelli Ayardes de MeloAntonio Leandro Chaves GurgelÉvelyn Silva de Melo SoaresThais Fernanda Farias de Souza ArcoCamila de GodoyAline Aparecida da Silva MiguelPriscila Bernardo de Andrade
Published in: Tropical animal health and production (2023)
The objective was to evaluate the effect of the supplementation with natural antioxidants from Yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensis St. Hil.) on the performance, carcass and meat characteristics, and fatty acid profile in meat and fat of Texel × Ile de France lambs kept in Brachiaria-grass pasture. Twenty lambs with a mean age of 90 days and 26.3 kg of BW were distributed in a completely randomized design in two treatments with 10 replicates/treatment: Control-protein-energy supplement based on corn and soybean meal (150 g/kg DM of crude protein) without the addition of natural antioxidant yerba mate and Yerba Mate - energy protein supplement with the addition of yerba mate (110 g/kg DM). There was no treatment effect on animal performance and carcass characteristics. The subcutaneous fat thickness was significantly higher for lambs treated without yerba mate. There was no effect of nutritional treatments on the oxidative markers of lamb meat. The muscle of the animals treated with yerba mate showed a higher concentration of unsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids elaidic, linolenic, thymnodonic, docosadienoic, and ceorvonic. The fat of the animals treated with yerba mate showed a higher concentration of palmitoleic acid, linoelaidic acid, heneicosanoic acid, dihomo-γ-linolenic acid, and arachidonic acid. The concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids was significantly higher in meat and fat of lambs treated with yerba mate. Including yerba mate in the diet of lambs kept on Brachiaria pastures improves the lipid profile of polyunsaturated fatty acids in meat and fat, without altering the performance of the animals.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • adipose tissue
  • oxidative stress
  • climate change
  • physical activity
  • amino acid
  • weight loss
  • binding protein
  • anti inflammatory
  • double blind
  • smoking cessation
  • neural network