Litcius/Paper detail

Oxidative Quality of Acid Oils and Fatty Acid Distillates Used in Animal Feeding

Elisa Varona, Alba Tres, Magda Rafecas, Stefania Vichi, R. Sala, Francesc Guardiola

2021Animals11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Acid oils (AO) and fatty acid distillates (FAD) are byproducts from chemical and physical refining of edible oils and fats, respectively. Their high energy value makes their upcycling interesting as alternatives to conventional fats in animal feeding. The objective of this study is to characterize their oxidative quality and to provide recommendations about their evaluation for animal feeding purposes. The oxidation status (peroxide value (PV), p-Anisidine value (p-AnV), % polymeric compounds (POL)), the oxidative stability (induction time by the Rancimat at 120 °C (IT)), the fatty acid composition (FA), and tocopherol and tocotrienol content of 92 AO and FAD samples from the Spanish market were analyzed. Both AO and FAD showed low PV (0.8 and 1 meq O2/kg); however, p-AnV was higher in FAD (36.4 vs. 16.4 in AO) and POL was higher in AO (2.5% vs. not detected in FAD) as a consequence of the type of refining process. The botanical origin of AO and FAD influenced FA and tocol composition, and they influenced IT. A high variability was observed for most analyzed parameters, reinforcing the need for standardizing AO and FAD to obtain reliable feed ingredients and to include primary and secondary oxidative parameters within their quality control.

Topics & Concepts

Peroxide valueFood scienceChemistryOxidative phosphorylationAcid valueFatty acidAnti oxidantTocopherolComposition (language)DistillationAntioxidantBiochemistryOrganic chemistryVitamin ELinguisticsPhilosophyEdible Oils Quality and AnalysisMeat and Animal Product QualityAntioxidant Activity and Oxidative Stress