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Dive into the research topics where H.A. Channon is active.

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Featured researches published by H.A. Channon.


Meat Science | 2016

Developing a cuts-based system to improve consumer acceptability of pork: Impact of gender, ageing period, endpoint temperature and cooking method.

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

The effect of gender (entire male, female and castrate), ageing period (2 or 7days) and endpoint temperature (70 or 75°C) on consumer perceptions of cuts from the loin (Musculuslongissimus thoracis et lumborum), silverside (Musculus biceps femoris) and shoulder (Musculus triceps brachii (roast) and Musculus supraspinatus (stir fry)) when roasted or stir fried (all primals) or grilled as steaks (loin only) was investigated. Higher scores for juiciness (P=0.035), flavour (P=0.017), overall liking (P=0.018), quality grade (P=0.026) were obtained from castrates than entire males, with females intermediate. Neither ageing period nor endpoint temperature, as main effects, influenced sensory scores. Loin steaks and silverside roasts obtained lower (P<0.001) scores for all sensory traits except aroma; scores for shoulder cuts were highest (P<0.001). Cooking to 70°C improved (P<0.05) juiciness, flavor and overall liking scores of loin steaks compared with 75°C. Different pathway interventions are required to optimize eating quality of different pork cuts and the cooking methods used to prepare them.


Meat Science | 2016

Estimating the impact of various pathway parameters on tenderness, flavour and juiciness of pork using Monte Carlo simulation methods.

H.A. Channon; Andrew J. Hamilton; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

Monte Carlo simulation was investigated as a potential methodology to estimate sensory tenderness, flavour and juiciness scores of pork following the implementation of key pathway interventions known to influence eating quality. Correction factors were established using mean data from published studies investigating key production, processing and cooking parameters. Probability distributions of correction factors were developed for single pathway parameters only, due to lack of interaction data. Except for moisture infusion, ageing period, aitchbone hanging and cooking pork to an internal temperature of >74°C, only small shifts in the mean of the probability distributions of correction factors were observed for the majority of pathway parameters investigated in this study. Output distributions of sensory scores, generated from Monte Carlo simulations of input distributions of correction factors and for individual pigs, indicated that this methodology may be useful in estimating both the shift and variability in pork eating traits when different pathway interventions are applied.


Meat Science | 2018

Eating quality traits of shoulder roast and stir fry cuts outperformed loin and silverside cuts sourced from entire and immunocastrated male pigs

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

This study investigated the effects of ageing period (2 or 7days), endpoint temperature (70 or 75°C), cut type (loin (M. longissimus thoracis et lumborum), silverside (M. biceps femoris), blade (M. triceps brachii) and chuck tender (M. supraspinatus)), cooking method (roast and stir fry (all cuts) and steak (loin only)) on eating quality attributes of pork from entire and immunocastrated male pigs. Higher intramuscular fat levels were found in all cuts from immunocastrated males compared with entire males. Of the seven cut type×cooking method combinations evaluated, shoulder cuts had the lowest fail rate (P<0.001) and loin steak and silverside cuts scored lowest (P<0.001) for tenderness, juiciness, overall liking, quality grade and re-purchase intention. Although no differences in sensory scores due to gender were observed, boar taint was identified in 10% of entire males. Minimising adverse risks in eating quality due to boar taint in males remains a key industry issue to ensure consistent delivery of high quality pork.


Translational Animal Science | 2017

Quantifying production, processing and post-slaughter effects on pork eating quality using random effects meta-regression1

H.A. Channon; D. N. D’Souza; F. R. Dunshea

Abstract Random effects meta-regression techniques, analyzed using a restricted maximum likelihood (REML) approach, was used to determine the influence of various factors that may be experienced or imposed on pigs, carcases and pork on pork eating quality attributes and shear force of the M. longissimus dorsi (loin). This was done to inform the development of a pathway based eating quality system for pork. Estimated means of explanatory variables were obtained for those pathway factors where sufficient published studies met the criteria for inclusion in the analysis. Due to a lack of data for interactions between factors investigated, only single factors were included as fixed terms in the REML models. This analysis identified that moisture infusion (P < 0.001), ageing for more than 2 d post-slaughter (P = 0.006) and tenderstretching (P = 0.006) each resulted in significant improvements in tenderness. Cooking loins to an endpoint temperature of ≥ 80°C negatively impacted both tenderness (P = 0.022) and juiciness (P < 0.001) scores compared with 70 to 74°C. It was not possible to develop algorithms to reliably estimate the effects of multiple factors on pork eating quality attributes to a cuts-based level due to limited studies reporting data for treatment interactions.


Meat Science | 2018

Diet composition and slaughter age up to 24 weeks have minimal impact on pork eating quality of loin steaks and silverside roasts from female pigs

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

Female crossbred pigs were randomly allocated at 16weeks of age to one of three dietary treatments (A: corn and soybean meal; B: wheat and canola meal; C: wheat and sorghum) matched for digestible energy (13.6MJ DE/kg) and total lysine (0.93-0.95%) and fed for 4, 5 or 8weeks, respectively, prior to slaughter. Loin (M. longissimus thoracis et lumborum) and silverside (M. biceps femoris) were obtained from 20 pigs per dietary treatment group and prepared into steaks and roasts, respectively, for consumer evaluation with ageing treatments of 7 and 28days post-slaughter allocated within muscle. Neither dietary treatment/age at slaughter nor ageing treatment influenced sensory traits of either cut. Intramuscular fat levels were also not influenced by dietary treatment. Higher (P<0.001) fail rates for silverside roasts compared with loin steaks indicate that different interventions are needed at a cut level to optimise pork eating quality consistency and consumer expectations.


Animal Production Science | 2017

Guaranteeing consistently high quality Australian pork: are we any closer?

H.A. Channon; D. N. D’Souza; F. R. Dunshea

Considerable investment has been made by the Australian pork industry over several decades, to address key factors that affect pork quality, so as to improve consumer acceptability of pork and pork products. These outcomes have been utilised to inform on-farm quality assurance programs, develop effective solutions to negate boar taint issues associated with the production of entire males, drive continuous improvement in animal management and encourage new technologies to be implemented in both the production and processing sectors of the Australian pork supply chain. Australian Pork Limited’s Strategic Plan 2015–20 is focused on maintaining profitable and sustainable growth in existing markets and developing strong foundations to support new opportunities, both in Australia and internationally. Guaranteeing that pork available for purchase is always consistently high in eating quality will support ongoing consumer demand for pork through increased consumption frequency. However, achieving this on an everyday basis presents industry with significant challenges due to the many complex interactions among the production, processing and post-slaughter factors experienced by pigs, carcasses and pork that can influence final product quality, either singularly or in combination. The present paper describes recent quantitative studies to determine the size and effect of pathway parameters on eating quality attributes of fresh pork and knowledge gaps identified. Outcomes of consumer sensory studies to inform the development of a non-prescriptive cuts-based eating quality system for pork and commercially validate particular pathway interventions are detailed. Through the implementation of validated pathway interventions to optimise pork eating quality, the overall industry objective is to reduce eating quality fail rates of different pork cuts to less than 10%.


Meat Science | 2018

Validating post-slaughter interventions to produce consistently high quality pork cuts from female and immunocastrated male pigs

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

Eating quality attributes of pork loin (M. longissimus thoracis et lumborum) and silverside (M. biceps femoris) from female and immunocastrated male carcases hung from either the Achilles tendon or aitchbone, aged for either 2 or 7 days post-slaughter and cooked as roasts, stir fry and steak (loin only) (n = 25/gender) was assessed. A positive control treatment of moisture infusion (10% injection rate) was applied to Achilles hung sides with cuts aged for 2 d post-slaughter. Neither gender nor ageing period influenced consumer sensory scores. Beneficial effects of aitchbone hanging on eating quality compared with Achilles hanging were largely observed after 2 d ageing, with improvements (P < 0.05) in overall liking scores found for loin stir fry and silverside stir fry and roasts. Overall liking scores of all cuts, except silverside stir fry, were increased (P < 0.05) when moisture infused compared with those from aitchbone-hung sides. However, targeted fail rates of <10% were not consistently achieved across all cuts evaluated.


Meat Science | 2018

Electrical stimulation or moisture infusion improves the eating quality attributes of loin and silverside cuts from female and immunocastrated male pigs

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

This study validated the effect of gender (female, immunocastrated male; n = 50), electrical stimulation (none or 150 mA constant current for 30 s at 2 min post-slaughter) and ageing period (2 or 14 d) on the eating quality of pork roast and stir fry sourced from the loin (M. longissimus thoracis et lumborum) and silverside (M. biceps femoris) and steak from the loin only. Moisture infusion was applied to 2 d aged, non-stimulated primals as a positive control treatment. Neither gender nor ageing period influenced (P > 0.05) eating quality. Electrical stimulation and moisture infusion were each effective interventions in improving pork eating quality, but their effects were inconsistent between the five cuts evaluated. No interventions achieved the fail rate target of <10% for quality grade for all cuts, indicating that additional interventions are needed to enable industry to consistently deliver high quality pork.


Meat Science | 2018

Guaranteeing the quality and integrity of pork – An Australian case study

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; R.G. Jarrett; G.S.H. Lee; R.J. Watling; J.Y.C. Jolley; F. R. Dunshea

The Australian pork industry is strongly committed to assuring the integrity of its product, with substantial research investment made over the past ten years to develop and implement systems to assure the consistency and quality of fresh pork and to enable accurate tracing of unpackaged fresh pork back to property of origin using trace elemental profiling. These initiatives are pivotal to allow Australian pork of guaranteed eating quality to be successfully positioned as higher value products, across a range of international and domestic markets, whilst managing any threats of product substitution. This paper describes the current status of the development of a predictive eating quality model for Australian pork, utilizing eating quality datasets generated from recent Australian studies. The implementation of trace elemental profiling, by Physi-Trace™, to verify and defend provenance claims and support the supply of consistently high eating quality Australian pork to its customers, is also discussed.


Animal Production Science | 2015

Pork eating quality was not improved by extended ageing for 14 days

H.A. Channon; D.N. D'Souza; F. R. Dunshea

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D.N. D'Souza

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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J.Y.C. Jolley

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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R.G. Jarrett

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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