Application of an electronic nose for measurements of boar taint in entire male pigs.

Meat Sci

Mikkeli Polytechnic, YTI Research Centre, P.O. Box 181, FIN-50101 Mikkeli, Finland; The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Department of Food Science, Sensory Science, Rolighedsvej 30, DK-1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark.

Published: November 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • An electronic nose using ion mobility spectrometry can effectively measure boar taint in male pigs by analyzing levels of androstenone and skatole.
  • Sensory boar taint was found to be more closely linked to androstenone, while skatole was associated with rancid odors.
  • The study highlights the potential of e-nose technology for quickly sorting pigs at slaughter, but emphasizes the need for a more comprehensive approach to understanding boar taint beyond just individual chemical measurements.

Article Abstract

An electronic nose based on ion mobility spectrometry was used for boar taint measurements of entire male pig samples varying in androstenone and skatole levels (0.09-0.88μg/g fat and 0.01-0.26μg/g fat, respectively). Sensory perceptible boar taint (especially boar odour) was found to be more related to androstenone than to skatole, whereas a rancid note was determined more related to skatole than to androstenone. Multivariate models implementing some generally prescribed cut-off limits for androstenone (0.50μg/g) and skatole (0.21μg/g) indicated that the e-nose could be used for ordering samples with respect to low and high levels of androstenone and skatole. Studying the direct relationships between e-nose data, sensory data, androstenone and skatole showed better predictivity of the chemical compounds (androstenone: r=-0.948, RMSEP=0.309; skatole: r=-0.629, RMSEP=0.069) than for single sensory descriptors (boar odour r=0.409, RMSEP=0.789). The results thus suggest that the e-nose technology based on ion mobility spectrometry as in the MGD-1 may have a potential for future rapid sorting of boars at the slaughter line. The study provides new knowledge of the applicability of ion mobility spectrometry for measuring boar taint and also confirms the challenge of measuring boar taint using chemically determined cut-off limits for a sensory perceptible phenomenon. Thus, future development should be more devoted to developing holistic approaches rather than focusing on the influence of single variables on boar taint.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.meatsci.2006.05.005DOI Listing

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