This study evaluated the effects of including palm kernel oil in the diets of pasture-raised sheep on carcass characteristics, meat quality, and fatty acid profiles. A completely randomized design with four treatments was used, consisting of 0, 20, 40, and 60 g/kg of palm kernel oil in the dry matter of the supplement, with eight replicates. Thirty-two uncastrated Santa Inês sheep, with an average initial body weight of 23.2 ± 2.6 kg, were used in this study. The animals were kept on Aruana grass (Panicum maximum (syn. Megathyrsus maximum) cv. Aruana) pastures under continuous stocking for 59 days (preceded by 15 days of adaptation), with each one fed supplements (1.4% of body weight) at 8 am. At the end of the experimental period, the animals were slaughtered in a commercial slaughterhouse for carcass and meat quality evaluation. The inclusion of palm kernel oil had a decreasing linear effect on hot and cold carcass weight (p = 0.0403) (p = 0.0398), but it did not affect hot or cold carcass yields or carcass morphometric measurements, commercial cut weights, pH, or loin area (p > 0.05). However, it affected the color of the L. lumborum muscle, showing an increasing linear effect on yellow intensity (b*) (p = 0.002) and on the centesimal composition, with an increasing linear effect on ether extract content (p = 0.006). Shear force, cooking loss, and water-holding capacity were not affected (p > 0.05). Fatty acid profiles, the atherogenicity and thrombogenicity indices, and the ratio of hypocholesterolemic to hypercholesterolemic fatty acids (h:H) were also unaffected by the inclusion of palm kernel oil (p > 0.05). The inclusion of up to 60 g/kg of palm kernel oil in the diets of pasture-raised sheep had an effect on carcass weight but not yield. It also had an effect on the color and chemical composition of L. lumborum muscle, but these changes did not compromise the overall quality of the meat.
Lima et al. (Wed,) studied this question.