Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas
Universidade Estadual de Maringá
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Publication
Featured researches published by Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas.
Chilean Journal of Agricultural Research | 2014
Maribel Velandia Valero; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Fernando Zawadzki; Elton Guntendorfer Bonafé; Grasiele Scaramal Madrona; Rodolpho Martin do Prado; Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Dayane Cristina Rivaroli; Jesuí Vergílio Visentainer; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
The natural additive products (propolis or essential oils), in replacing antibiotics, could be used as an alternative for feed strategies to improve animal production. This work was performed to evaluate the effect of natural additives as propolis or essential oils on meat quality of crossbred (Aberdeen Angus vs. Nellore) bulls. Thirty bulls were kept in feedlot (individual pen) for 55 d and randomly assigned to one of three diets (n = 10): control (CON), propolis (PRO), or essential oils (OIL). CON diet consists of corn silage (45% DM) and concentrate (cracked corn, soybean meal, glycerin, limestone, and mineral salt, 55% DM). The PRO group received same CON diet plus 3 g animal-1 d-1 of propolis premix added to the concentrate. The OIL group received same CON diet and 3 g animal-1 d-1 of a premix (cashew Anacardium occidentale L. and castor Ricinus communis L. oils) added to the concentrate. Fat thickness (5.0 mm), pH (5.9), Longissimus muscle area 58.0 cm2, marbling, texture, color (L* = 36.6, a* = 17.3, and b* = 5.9), lipid oxidation (0.08 malonaldehyde kg-1 meat), and Warner-Bratzler shear force (3.3 kg) were unaffected by the diet. PRO and OIL diets had no effect neither on moisture (73.7%), ashes (1.1%), protein (23.8%), and lipids (1.7%), fatty acid composition or polyunsaturated/saturated fatty acid (PUFA/ SFA, 0.13), and n-6/n-3 ratio (6.9) on Longissimus muscle. Addition of natural additives as propolis extract or cashew and castor oils in the diet of bulls when they are finished in a feedlot did not change meat qualities.
Meat Science | 2017
Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Camila Mottin; Carlos Antonio Lopes de Oliveira; Ana Guerrero; María del Mar Campo; C. Sañudo; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
Forty ½ Brown Swiss×½ Nellore crossbred bulls were distributed into three experimental groups: CON - diet without addition of essential oils; CLO - diet with average 5,000mg/animal/day of clove essential oils and CIN - diet with average 5,000mg/animal/day of cinnamon essential oils to evaluate three methodologies of visual acceptability: with steaks directly in Trays and Sequential and Random photos. Seventeen consumers evaluated visual appearance of meat using a 9-point structured hedonic scale. CON group presented higher shelf-life than essential oils groups. Trays and Sequential scores were similar in the majority of days; thus digital images could be used to evaluate colour evolution. However, Random photos resulted in lower scores and slower acceptability decrease than Trays and Sequential photos (p<0.05) among the second and fifth day of display. Random photos presented a lower and more constant standard deviation than Trays and Sequential photos (p<0.01) indicating that this methodology promoted a higher standard situation for meat colour evaluation.
Animal Production Science | 2017
Carlos Emanuel Eiras; Camila Mottin; Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Ana Guerrero; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
This study aimed to evaluate the effects of diets composed of cottonseed hull on feed intake, in vitro digestibility, animal performance, carcass characteristics and ingestive behaviour of young bulls (1/2 Simmental × 1/2 Nellore) fed in a high-concentrate system. Thirty crossbred young bulls (319 ± 12.5 kg of bodyweight, and 11 ± 0.8 months old) were assigned to a complete randomised experimental design of three diets (CH21: cottonseed hull 210 g/kg on a DM, basis; CH27: cottonseed hull 270 g/kg on a DM basis; CH33: cottonseed hull 330 g/kg on a DM basis) with 10 animals per group. The animals were kept in a feedlot for 162 days. The cottonseed hull diets had effects on DM intake and neutral detergent fibre intake. The CH21 diet reduced the DM and detergent fibre intakes (kg/day and kg/100 kg bodyweight) and increased the in vitro digestibility of DM. However, the in vitro digestibility of neutral detergent fibre was greater with the CH27 diet. The cottonseed hull diets did not have effects on animal performance or the carcass characteristics of young bulls. However, the CH33 diet reduced the feed efficiency of the animals. A cottonseed hull level up to 270 g/kg of dietary DM may be utilised as a non-forage fibre in high-concentrate diets for young bulls in feedlots.
PUBVET | 2016
Rodrigo Augusto Cortez Passett; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Camila Mottin; Ana Guerrero
Colour perception plays a major role in evaluation of meat quality, especially during purchasing. Consumers need first to be entirely satisfied with the sensory properties of meat, before other quality dimensions become relevant. The traditional methodology of assessing meat color evolution in displays is complex, expensive and demands long duration. Photographs are an alternative to overcome these difficulties thus the validation of this methodology become necessary. One of the biggest problems in coloration assessments is the development of new methodologies to obtain information that is significant; they can compare and improve products. These difficulties can be overcome by assessing the color through photographs, as in a visual inspection system computer an image and a computer with software can perform several pre-defined goals, so its use could lead to more consistent results efficient manner. Thus our objective was to reviser perception of meat between viewing meat directly in displayer and their corresponding photographs to assess the reliability and accuracy of using food photographs as an assessment tool.
Acta Scientiarum. Animal Sciences | 2014
Lorrayny Galoro da Silva; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Carlos Emanuel Eiras; Rodolpho Martin do Prado; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
Acta Scientiarum. Animal Sciences | 2014
José Luiz Moletta; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Carlos Emanuel Eiras; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
Acta Scientiarum. Animal Sciences | 2013
Carlos Emanuel Eiras; Jair de Araújo Marques; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Fernando Zawadzki; José Luis Moletta; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2017
Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Camila Mottin; Ana Carolina Pelaes Vital; Ana Guerrero; C. Sañudo; María del Mar Campo; Ivanor Nunes do Prado
PUBVET | 2016
Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Carlos Emanuel Eiras; Ana Guerrero Barrado; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Camila Mottin; I. N. do Prado
PUBVET | 2016
Mariana Garcia Ornaghi; Carlos Emanuel Eira; Ana Guerrero Barrado; Juliana Akamine Torrecilhas; Rodrigo Augusto Cortêz Passetti; Camila Mottin; Ivanor Nunes do Prado