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It is possible variation in pork quality contributes to reduced customer confidence in the predictability of finished product quality, and therefore, may lead to pork products being less competitive for U.S. consumer dollars. The objective of this study was to quantify the amount of variability attributable to pork primal quality by sex, season, marketing group (MG), production focus (PF), and random variation (pig).
Pigs (
Variances for carcass composition traits were: HCW (s2 = 88.13 kg), backfat thickness (15.96 mm), loin depth (72.62 mm), percent lean (7.63%), and iodine value (13.17g/100g Fatty Acid Methyl Esters). Pig contributed 93.5% of the variation in HCW, and MG, sex, season, and PF accounted for 4.1, 1.4, 0.8, and 0.3%, respectively. Variability that was present in percent lean could be attributed to pig (39.4%), PF (36.4%), sex (15.8%), and season (10.2%). Pig contributed 71.9% of the variability in iodine value; remaining variation was accounted for by PF (14.0%), sex (13.2%), and MG (0.9%). Variances for loin traits were: boneless weight (s2 = 0.24 kg), L* (6.21), a* (1.32), b* (1.08), ultimate pH (0.02), slice shear force (30.24 kg), and marbling score (0.85). Loin weight variability was attributed to 68.7% by pig, 21.4% by PF, 5.4% by sex, 2.7% by season, and 1.8% by MG. Pig accounted for 70.5% of the variability in loin L*, season 17.2%, PF 9.1%, and sex 3.3%. Ultimate pH variability was accounted for by pig (88.5%), season (6.2%), PF (2.4%), MG (2.2%), and sex (0.7%). Pig accounted for 62.7% of the variability in slice shear force, with remaining variability accounted for by season (23.4%), PF (11.2%), and sex (2.8%). Variability in marbling score was impacted by pig (48.9%), PF (39.0%), and sex (12.0%). Variances for belly traits were: weight (s2 = 1.32 kg), length (18.59 cm), width (5.98 cm), average depth (0.18 cm), and flop (0.70). Belly weight variability was due to 88.9% pig, 4.1% sex, 3.8% MG, 3.0% PF, and 0.1% season. Variability in belly flop was attributed to pig (74.6%), PF (13.6%), sex (11.3%), and MG (0.5%). Variances for ham traits were: weight (s2 = 1.20 kg), semimembranosus (SM) pH (0.08), SM L* (9.83), SM a* (3.47), and SM b* (2.42). Ham weight variability was accounted for by pig (93.9%), MG (2.8%), PF (2.2%), and season (1.1%). Variability of SM L* was due to pig (95.3%), season (3.0%), MG (0.8%), sex (0.6%), and PF (0.3%).
Although variability of carcass composition and quality traits can be accounted for by sex, season, PF, and MG, the greatest portion of variability cannot be attributed to those factors. Therefore, other factors, including inherent variation of pigs, contribute to variability in pork quality and carcass characteristics. This project was funded, in part, by The Pork Checkoff.