The impact of bone development on final carcass weight

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskning

Standard

The impact of bone development on final carcass weight. / Tatara, M.R.; Tygesen, Malin Plumhoff; Sawa-Wojtanowicz, B.; Harrison, Adrian Paul.

I: Archiv für Tierzucht / Archives of Animal Breeding, Bind 49, Nr. Special Issue, 2006, s. 132-136.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskning

Harvard

Tatara, MR, Tygesen, MP, Sawa-Wojtanowicz, B & Harrison, AP 2006, 'The impact of bone development on final carcass weight', Archiv für Tierzucht / Archives of Animal Breeding, bind 49, nr. Special Issue, s. 132-136.

APA

Tatara, M. R., Tygesen, M. P., Sawa-Wojtanowicz, B., & Harrison, A. P. (2006). The impact of bone development on final carcass weight. Archiv für Tierzucht / Archives of Animal Breeding, 49(Special Issue), 132-136.

Vancouver

Tatara MR, Tygesen MP, Sawa-Wojtanowicz B, Harrison AP. The impact of bone development on final carcass weight. Archiv für Tierzucht / Archives of Animal Breeding. 2006;49(Special Issue):132-136.

Author

Tatara, M.R. ; Tygesen, Malin Plumhoff ; Sawa-Wojtanowicz, B. ; Harrison, Adrian Paul. / The impact of bone development on final carcass weight. I: Archiv für Tierzucht / Archives of Animal Breeding. 2006 ; Bind 49, Nr. Special Issue. s. 132-136.

Bibtex

@article{72aee440a1c011ddb6ae000ea68e967b,
title = "The impact of bone development on final carcass weight",
abstract = "Proper development and function of the skeleton is crucial for the optimal growth of an organism, with rapid growth rates often resulting in skeletal disorders in farm animals. Yet, despite clear benefits for breed selection and animal welfare (HARRISON et al., 2004), the impact of bone development on final livestock characteristics remains largely undetermined. Male Shropshire lambs, sired by a ram with a high genetic potential for daily live weight gain (n=11), or a ram with a high genetic potential for both daily gain and lean content (n=12), were slaughtered at a mean age of 146 days. The femur was removed and its parameters correlated with carcass weight. Results suggest that both femur length and femur weight act as good predictors of final carcass weight in lambs. However, no effect of paternal genetics, on the femur to carcass correlations, was noted.",
keywords = "Former LIFE faculty, femur, small ruminants, paternal genetics",
author = "M.R. Tatara and Tygesen, {Malin Plumhoff} and B. Sawa-Wojtanowicz and Harrison, {Adrian Paul}",
year = "2006",
language = "English",
volume = "49",
pages = "132--136",
journal = "Archiv fur Tierzucht",
issn = "0003-9438",
publisher = "Copernicus Publications",
number = "Special Issue",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of bone development on final carcass weight

AU - Tatara, M.R.

AU - Tygesen, Malin Plumhoff

AU - Sawa-Wojtanowicz, B.

AU - Harrison, Adrian Paul

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - Proper development and function of the skeleton is crucial for the optimal growth of an organism, with rapid growth rates often resulting in skeletal disorders in farm animals. Yet, despite clear benefits for breed selection and animal welfare (HARRISON et al., 2004), the impact of bone development on final livestock characteristics remains largely undetermined. Male Shropshire lambs, sired by a ram with a high genetic potential for daily live weight gain (n=11), or a ram with a high genetic potential for both daily gain and lean content (n=12), were slaughtered at a mean age of 146 days. The femur was removed and its parameters correlated with carcass weight. Results suggest that both femur length and femur weight act as good predictors of final carcass weight in lambs. However, no effect of paternal genetics, on the femur to carcass correlations, was noted.

AB - Proper development and function of the skeleton is crucial for the optimal growth of an organism, with rapid growth rates often resulting in skeletal disorders in farm animals. Yet, despite clear benefits for breed selection and animal welfare (HARRISON et al., 2004), the impact of bone development on final livestock characteristics remains largely undetermined. Male Shropshire lambs, sired by a ram with a high genetic potential for daily live weight gain (n=11), or a ram with a high genetic potential for both daily gain and lean content (n=12), were slaughtered at a mean age of 146 days. The femur was removed and its parameters correlated with carcass weight. Results suggest that both femur length and femur weight act as good predictors of final carcass weight in lambs. However, no effect of paternal genetics, on the femur to carcass correlations, was noted.

KW - Former LIFE faculty

KW - femur

KW - small ruminants

KW - paternal genetics

M3 - Journal article

VL - 49

SP - 132

EP - 136

JO - Archiv fur Tierzucht

JF - Archiv fur Tierzucht

SN - 0003-9438

IS - Special Issue

ER -

ID: 8013566