Litcius/Paper detail

Quality of main types of hunted red deer meat obtained in Spain compared to farmed venison from New Zealand

Martina Pérez Serrano, Aristide Maggiolino, Tomás Landete‐Castillejos, Mirian Pateiro, F. Javier Pérez‐Barbería, Yolanda Fierro, Rubén Domínguez, Laureano Gallego, Andrés J. García, Pasquale De Palo, José M. Lorenzo

2020Scientific Reports26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Deer venison is increasingly valued as a natural meat. This study examines the three main sources of venison: farmed venison from New Zealand (NZ), the world's leading producer, and wild deer from Spain (SP), the second largest producer, which mainly supplies venison from traditional autumn-winter driven hunts (monteria), involving packs of dogs, and a smaller proportion culled through summer selective stalking. Meat from NZ contained more protein, lower shear force and lower n-6/n-3 ratio (P < 0.01). Spanish meat had a greater content of total, essential and non-essential amino acids (P < 0.01). Meat from deer culled in winter had lower intramuscular fat and saturated fatty acids (FA) but higher polyunsaturated FA (P < 0.01) and pH (P < 0.001) than meat from summer stalked deer. Therefore, venison presents differences by country of origin for composition, FA and texture that are likely to affect its health characteristics. Anomalies observed in meat between the winter driven hunt and non-stressful summer stalking may be attributed to the level of death stress in the case of variables such as pH. However, the effect on fat and mineral composition seems to be seasonal, depending respectively on wild diet or cyclic osteoporosis in males.

Topics & Concepts

Intramuscular fatPolyunsaturated fatty acidBiologyComposition (language)Red meatAnimal scienceFood scienceFatty acidLinguisticsPhilosophyBiochemistryMeat and Animal Product QualityGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestockAnimal Behavior and Welfare Studies