• Title/Summary/Keyword: Tangerine byproduct

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Effect of Feeding Dietary Tangerine Byproduct for a Long Time on Chemical Compositions of Loin for Crossbred Pig (감귤 부산물 첨가 사료를 장기간 급여한 교잡종 돼지고기의 성분 특성)

  • Yang Seung-Ju;Kang Chang-Hong;Yang Jong-Beom;Jung In-Chul;Moon Yoon-Hee
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.16 no.2
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    • pp.186-191
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of this research was to study the chemical compositions of pork for crossbred pig (female, 198 days old $102{\sim}118kg$) that were fed with tangerine byproduct from pregnancy through the whole rearing period. The samples for this study consisted of the pork from give the number of control pigs not fed with tangerine byproduct($T_0$), and the pork from give the number of study pigs fed with 8% tangerine byproduct during the whole breeding period, from the early pregnancy through the young, growing and finishing periods ($T_1$). Backfat thickness of the crossbred pigs was significantly decreased by feeding tangerine byproduct (p<0.05). The proximate composition, minerals, total amino acid, saturated fatty acid vs. unsaturated fatty acid and vitamin $B_2$ contents of loins were not significantly different among $T_0\;and\;T_1$, (p>0.05). Although those differences were not significant statistically, the tangerine byproduct tended to increase the amount of vitamin $B_1$, and decrease the crude fat and cholesterol contents.

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Effect of Meat Supplementation of Jeju Native Black Pigs Fed Tangerine Byproduct on Lipid Metabolism, Protein Level and Enzyme Activities in Rats (감귤 부산물을 급여한 제주 재래돼지고기의 섭취가 흰쥐의 지질대사, 단백질 농도 및 효소 활성에 미치는 영향)

  • Koh Jin-Bog;Yang Seung-Joo;Jung In-Chul;Ryon Jae-Suk;Moon Yoon-Hee
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.26 no.2
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    • pp.175-182
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    • 2006
  • Diets consist of two different pork samples: pork of a Jeju native pig ( 260 days old, $101{\sim}103kg$ ) not fed tangerine byproduct during finishing period ($T_0$), and pork fed 8% and 15% tangerine byproduct during growing and finishing period ($T_1$), respectively. The effects of the diet on the physiological activities of rats were studied by feeding 17-week old rats with the two diets for 4 weeks. There was no significant difference between $T_0$ and $T_1$ in the rat's feed intake, feed efficiency ratio, and weight gain. Furthermore, there was no significant difference between $T_0$ and $T_1$ in the rat's weight of liver, kidney, spleen, epididymal fat pad, triglyceride and cholesterol of liver. Both $T_0$ and $T_1$ showed similar trends in terms of total lipid, phospholipid, triglyceride, total cholesterol, atherogenic index, protein, glucose, hemoglobin level, mineral level, and ${\gamma}$-GTP, ALT, AST and ALP activities. However, $T_1$ showed the trend of increasing amount of the serum's HDL and LDL cholesterol level, compared with $T_0$.