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A procedure for preparation of pig carcasses for chemical analysis with special reference to micro-analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

E. Florence
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Dairying, Shinfield, Reading, RG2 9AT
K. G. Mitchell
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Dairying, Shinfield, Reading, RG2 9AT
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Extract

The potential value of carcass chemical analysis in a variety of animal research studies is not only in the specific information it alone can provide, but in particular as a means of substantiating and augmenting data obtained from other experimental approaches. For example, it may be used in conjunction with in vivo nutrient balance studies and with physical dissection in carcass quality assessment studies. Realization of the full potential value of carcass chemical analysis depends entirely, however, on the ability to produce, from the initial highly heterogeneous carcass material, a fully representative sample that is sufficiently homogeneous to enable valid analyses to be made using the desired analytical techniques. Macro-analytical techniques may be acceptable when the numbers of samples involved are relatively small and /or when the analytical resources available are not critical. Under such conditions a lower degree of homogeneity will be acceptable in the material to be analysed than that required when micro-analytical techniques are used.

Type
54th Meeting, Coventry, 27 to 29 March 1972 Symposium: Aspects of Carcass Evaluation
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Production 1972

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References

Kotarbinska, M. 1971. The chemical composition of the body in growing pigs. Roczn. Nauk win. Ser. B. 93: 129135.Google Scholar