Impacts of Genetic Improvement
on Meat Quality
Meat lines are being genetically selected for rapid growth,
high feed conversion efficiency and large muscle mass. The effects this has on
meat quality are beginning to emerge, and it is now recognized that they depend
partly on the genotype that is chosen at the outset. Each species, and
sometimes each breed, needs to be considered separately.
Some of the improvements in growth performance and
conformation have had unwanted effects on meat quality. Animals with large
muscles often have poor marbling in their meat and this is leading to problems
with meat dryness. This has been a feature in beef, pigs and turkeys, but an additional
problem in turkeys is the high cooking loss of its breast meat.
Selection
for growth rate in cattle, pigs and broiler chickens is resulting in paler
meat. In the case of pigs, this is linked to the PSE condition, where selection
is being directed towards stress-susceptible genotypes. Turkey sire lines are being selected inadvertently for stress-induced glycogen depletion in
their muscle and DFD meat.
Some of the traditional European beef breed societies
claim that meat quality is superior in their genetically improved pedigree
stock. However, the differences are not as pronounced as some of them might
hope. When two African breeds (Afrikaner and Nguni) were compared with a range
of temperate cattle breeds under comparable conditions, their meat had less
marbling but when ovenroasted it had similar eating quality (Strydom
et al
., 2000). At the other
extreme, genetic selection for double muscling is leading to less marbling and paler,
less red meat and, because of the lower level of marbling, there is a risk that
the meat has less succulence and flavour. In temperate cattle breeds not expressing
double muscling, selection against fatness could be leading to tougher meat, as
in some breeds the genetic correlation between the two traits is strong (Table
12.7). However, simultaneous selection for growth rate should counteract the
trend towards toughness. In subtropical beef breeds selection against fatness
may be less closely linked to meat toughness, whilst selection for growth rate
could be leading to paler meat (Reverter
et al
., 2003). In addition, the heritability of meat
quality traits is slightly higher in subtropical compared with temperate breeds
(Johnston
et
al.,
2003).
It should be possible to improve marbling genetically
when an appropriate marker is discovered. Marbling score can be highly
heritable in beef, but this depends to some extent on breed (
h
2
=
0.71; Splan
et al
., 1998). The
h
2
for tenderness is not as
strong (0.26 to 0.35), and meat flavour and juiciness are not heritable.
In pigs, intramuscular fat content and meat tenderness
have a high heritability (
h
2
=
0.4 to 0.6), as does meat
redness (
h
2
=
0.72; Oksbjerg
et al.,
2004). It might be hoped that
insufficient redness could be corrected genetically by influencing the fibre
types in the muscles. However, genetic selection for a high proportion of
slow-twitch type I fibres in the longissimus dorsi muscle did not influence the
rate of post-mortem muscle glycolysis in that muscle or subsequent meat colour
in the biceps femoris (Lefaucheur
et al
., 2000).