A recent paper published in the Journal of Animal
Science suggests producers may want to adjust pig diets when including
distillers dried grains with solubles (DDGS). Some producers believe that
feeding pigs saturated fats will undo the fat-softening effects of DDGS. Firmer
fat means longer-lasting pork.
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But researchers from the University of Illinois
found that including saturated fats in DDGS diets makes no difference in fat
quality.
The researchers formulated six corn-soybean meal
diets to test the effects of saturated fat additives on carcass fat quality in
pigs. Five of these diets contained DDGS.
According to the researchers, pork produced from
pigs fed DDGS have reduced shelf life and increased susceptibility to oxidative
damage. Oxidative damage affects texture, color, juiciness and the overall
flavor of pork products.
"Distillers dried grains contain unsaturated
fatty acids and those fatty acids are deposited into the fat of the
animal," said Hans-Henrik Stein, study co-author and Department of Animal
Science professor at the University of Illinois. "From a health
standpoint, that's a good thing, but it can be a problem when producing pork
products like bacon."
According to Stein, high levels of unsaturated fats
make pork belly fat too soft to slice for bacon. To counteract this problem,
producers have included saturated fats such as corn germ, beef tallow, palm
kernel oil and glycerol in diets containing DDGS in order to make the fat
firmer.
For this study, corn germ, beef tallow, palm kernel
oil and glycerol were each added to a diet containing DDGS. The researchers
compared the performance of pigs fed each of these diets to the performance of
pigs fed a diet containing DDGS with no saturated fats added and a control diet
containing corn-soybean meal but no DDGS.
Firmness of fat was tested by measuring the distance
of "belly flop." This was done by draping the belly of the carcasses
over a metal rod with the skin facing down. Ten centimeters below the rod,
distance was measured between the two sides. The larger the distance was, the
firmer the fat.
The researchers found that pigs fed the control diet
containing no DDGS had greater belly flop distances than the pigs fed the other
diets. There was no difference among the pigs fed the five diets containing
DDGS.
This led researchers to conclude that adding
saturated fats to diets containing DDGS has no effect on the fat quality of
pigs.
Stein suggested that producers feeding high levels
of DDGS reduce the amount fed in the last 3 to 4 weeks before harvest to avoid
the softening of fat.
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