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Dive into the research topics where M. Gispert is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Gispert.


Meat Science | 2010

Carcass and meat quality characteristics of immunocastrated male, surgically castrated male, entire male and female pigs.

M. Gispert; M. Angels Oliver; A. Velarde; Paloma Suarez; Jesús Pérez; María Font Furnols

The aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of immunocastration on meat and carcass quality compared with meat from females, entire and surgically castrated males. One hundred and eighteen (LandracexDuroc)xPietrain crossbred pigs were assigned to four experimental groups: entire males (EM), females (FE), surgically castrated males (CM) and vaccinated males (IM). Pigs were reared in two pens per sex and slaughtered at an average of 180 days of age. Carcass and meat quality characteristics such as testis size and length, fat depth, lean content, proportion of the carcass represented by each joint, pH, colour and intramuscular fat were evaluated. There was a significant reduction in the size of these sexual organs in IM compared with EM. CM and IM were fatter than FE and EM in the loin area but, in the ham area, CM was the fattest and EM the leanest, while IM and FE were in between. Intramuscular fat of IM (2.1%) was no different from the other sexes evaluated, although it was higher in CM (2.5%) with respect to FE (1.7%) and EM (1.8%). There was no difference between the IM and other treatment groups in meat quality. Regarding ours results we can conclude that from the point of view of meat and carcass quality the immunocastration could be a good alternative to the surgical castration.


Meat Science | 2000

An international study on the importance of androstenone and skatole for boar taint : III. Consumer survey in seven European countries

K.R. Matthews; D.B. Homer; P. Punter; M.P. Béague; M. Gispert; A.J. Kempster; H. Agerhem; C. Claudi-Magnussen; K. Fischer; F. Siret; H. Leask; M. Font i Furnols; Michel Bonneau

There has long been debate over the relative importance for consumer acceptability of androstenone and skatole. The objective of this study was to investigate consumer reaction to pig meat of varying levels of androstenone and skatole in seven member states of the European Union. Over 4000 entire male pigs (and 233 gilts as a control) were produced in six European countries, and a sub-sample of 420 were selected to represent a range of androstenone and skatole levels. Loin samples from these pigs were distributed to the seven participating countries. Samples were prepared and cooked according to standardised procedures in each of the countries and presented to pork consumers. Each consumer rated samples from five pigs for liking of flavour and liking of odour. Although there were significant differences between country panels in their liking of meat from entire males generally, there was a greater degree of dislike as both androstenone and skatole increased. This reaction was stronger for skatole than androstenone and consumers reacted more negatively in terms of odour than flavour.


Livestock Production Science | 2003

Carcass quality of 10 beef cattle breeds of the Southwest of Europe in their typical production systems

J. Piedrafita; Raquel Quintanilla; C. Sañudo; José-Luis Olleta; Marı́a-Mar Campo; B. Panea; Gilles Renand; Françoise Turin; Sylvie Jabet; K. Osoro; Marı́a-Carmen Oliván; Gerardo Noval; Pepa Garcı́a; Marı́a-Dolores Garcı́a; Marı́a-Angels Oliver; M. Gispert; X. Serra; Manuel Espejo; Susana Garcia; M Lopez; Mercedes Izquierdo

A sample of about 70 young bulls of each of 10 beef cattle breeds from France and Spain, reared in their typical production systems, was studied regarding growth and carcass quality traits. There were large differences between and within breed-systems. The animals slaughtered in Spain weighed between 444 and 551 kg, whereas the range in France was from 610 to 750 kg. Growth showed a linear tendency; the daily weight gain ranging from 1.03 to 1.65 kg/day. Asturiana de los Valles and Pirenaica were, among the Spanish populations, the breed-systems with more muscle (around 75%) and less fat (8-10%) in the carcass, whereas Avilena-Negra Iberica, Morucha and Retinta showed opposite characteristics (60-65% muscle and 17-19% total fat at the 6th rib). Bruna dels Pirineus and Asturiana de la Montana occupied an intermediate position. All of the French breed-systems, Aubrac, Gasconne and Salers surpassed 73% muscle, while the percentage of total fat ranged from 7.6 to 10%. Salers breed-system also showed the longest and thinnest hind-limb. In the wide range of carcass weights studied in this paper, the general relationships among carcass traits were confirmed. Animals with the better conformation were also leaner. Longer carcasses tended to be associated with poor conformation and fatness. Bone content was clearly opposed to carcass conformation and muscle content.


Meat Science | 2000

Influence of differences in sensitivity of Spanish and German consumers to perceive androstenone on the acceptance of boar meat differing in skatole and androstenone concentrations

U Weiler; M. Font i Furnols; K. Fischer; H Kemmer; M.A. Oliver; M. Gispert; Andreas Dobrowolski; R Claus

The reactions of German (n=472) and Spanish (n=480) consumers of the European boar taint study to boar meat were evaluated according to their androstenone sensitivity. Consumers were checked with pure substance for their androstenone sensitivity. Eighteen per cent of the German and 31% of the Spanish participants were highly sensitive to androstenone, with a significantly higher proportion of women. For insensitive/mildly sensitive consumers, skatole level was the main determinant for the rating of flavour and odour of pork. For highly sensitive consumers, androstenone significantly influenced the rating of odour (Spain and Germany) and flavour (Germany) and is the predominant problem for that group, due to the high percentage of carcasses with high androstenone levels.


Meat Science | 1993

The effects of breed and halothane sensitivity on pig meat quality

M.A. Oliver; M. Gispert; A. Diestre

The effects of halothane sensitivity and breed (Belgian Landrace BL and Landrace L), and their interactions on carcass and meat quality were analysed. Also the effect of breed (Pietrain P, BL, L, Large White LW and Duroc D) on carcass and meat quality was studied in a sample of 153 gilts. Each of the half-carcasses was cut and fully dissected to obtain lean percentage. The following measurements of meat quality were carried out: muscle pH, electrical conductivity (QM) and light scattering (POP). Muscle reflectance (GOFO value), muscle protein solubility (MPS) and intramuscular fat content were also determined. The results obtained in this study revealed the effect of halothane gene on all of the traits studied. The halothane-positive animals showed less fat thickness and more lean percentage in the carcass. The P and BL breeds had more lean percentage in the carcass and a better lean-to-bone ratio compared with L, LW and D. The L breed was intermediate. Stress sensitivity is an important factor affecting the inverse relationship between carcass quality and meat quality. Those breeds free of the halothane gene (LW and D) had the best meat quality. The L breed was in an intermediate position, but more similar to halothane-negative breeds. The Duroc breed had significantly higher intra-muscular fat (>2·0%), required for optimum fresh meat quality and for the production of Spanish dry-cured ham of high quality.


Meat Science | 2004

Risk assessment of PSE condition due to pre-slaughter conditions and RYR1 gene in pigs

M.D. Guàrdia; J. Estany; S. Balasch; M.A. Oliver; M. Gispert; A. Diestre

A polychotomous logistic regression model was used to identify and assess the risk factors for pork meat becoming pale, soft and exudative (PSE). A total of 116 deliveries, comprising 15,695 commercial pigs delivered from different commercial farms to five Spanish pig commercial abattoirs were surveyed. The PSE condition was described as an ordinal response variable (normal, prone to PSE and PSE) based on measurements of electrical conductivity in the Semimembranosus muscle 1-2 h post-mortem. The RYR1 genotype, the abattoir, the season, the gender, the floor surface in the lorry, the loading system, and the stocking density during transportation influenced the risk of PSE condition, as well as on-farm fasting time, loading time, transportation and lairage times. The effect of the RYR1 gene, determined in a subsample of 1331 pigs, was due to nn stress-susceptible pigs, in which the risk of PSE meat (PQM>6 μs) increased fourfold. Abattoirs should be especially careful in summer, when the risk of PSE meat was found to be double that of winter. The risk of PSE meat decreased with the time of transportation, though its effect depended on the stocking density. Thus, our results indicate that, for transits longer than 3 h, the risk of PSE increases with stocking density during transport, while the opposite occurs for shorter transits.


Meat Science | 2000

An international study on the importance of androstenone and skatole for boar taint: IV. Simulation studies on consumer dissatisfaction with entire male pork and the effect of sorting carcasses on the slaughter line, main conclusions and recommendations.

Michel Bonneau; P. Walstra; C. Claudi-Magnussen; A.J. Kempster; Eva Tornberg; K. Fischer; A. Diestre; F. Siret; Patrick Chevillon; R Claus; G.B. Dijksterhuis; P. Punter; K.R. Matthews; H. Agerhem; M.P. Béague; M.A. Oliver; M. Gispert; U Weiler; G. von Seth; H. Leask; M. Font i Furnols; D.B. Homer; G.L. Cook

An international study has been conducted in order to determine the respective contributions of androstenone and skatole to boar taint and their possible variations according to production systems and consumer populations. The presentation of the study and the main results concerning skatole and androstenone levels and data from sensory evaluation or consumer surveys are reported in companion papers. The present paper summarises the main conclusions of the study and gives tentative recommendations. A simulation study was conducted, based on the skatole and androstenone levels currently observed in European populations of entire male pigs and on the results of the consumer surveys. The first part of the simulation study demonstrated that, overall, 6.5% (odour) and 3.0% (flavour) more consumers were dissatisfied with entire male than with gilt pork. The differences were, however, very variable according to countries. Consumer dissatisfaction for the odour of entire male pork was mostly associated with high skatole levels, while androstenone had little influence on it. On the other hand, androstenone and skatole had similar contributions to the level of dissatisfaction for flavour. From the present study it is not possible to determine clear cut-off levels for androstenone/skatole. The regression equations presented in [Matthews, K. R., Homer, D. B., Punter, P., Béague, M. P., Gispert, M., Siret, F., Leask, H., Fonti i Furnols, M., & Bonneau, M. (2000). An international study on the importance of androstenone, skatole for boar taint: III. Consumer survey in seven European countries. Meat Science, 54, 271-283] provide a basis for decision making. However, due to methodological limitations, the results may underestimate consumer reaction to entire male pork. The second part of the simulation study demonstrated that sorting carcasses on the basis of androstenone/skatole would reduce, but not eliminate, differences in consumer dissatisfaction between entire male and gilt pork. For odour, taking androstenone into account did not improve the efficiency obtained from sorting using skatole only. For flavour, sorting using both compounds was more efficient than sorting using skatole only. Sorting out 15% of the entire males, on the basis of skatole only, would result in a difference in the proportion of dissatisfied consumers of 4.2% (odour) or 2.0% (flavour) between entire male and gilt pork. The results of the last part of the simulation study demonstrated that decreasing skatole in entire male pig populations, to levels as low as 0.10 ppm, would still result in a difference in the proportion of dissatisfied consumers of 3.2% (odour) or 1.6% (flavour). To reduce this difference further, the levels of both compounds would have to be reduced still further. The lowest difference that can be achieved is 2.3% (odour) or 0.4% (flavour). The conclusions of the present study may differ according to whether immediate commercial applications or long-term goals are considered. On the basis of the skatole and androstenone levels currently observed in entire male pig populations, sorting out procedures based on skatole is the easiest way to rapidly achieve a significant decrease in consumer dissatisfaction with entire male pork. In most countries, however, this will not be sufficient to obtain the same level of acceptability as with gilts. In the long term, a sharp reduction in both skatole and androstenone would have to be achieved in entire male pig populations to obtain low differences in acceptability between entire male and gilt pork.


Meat Science | 2006

Effect of different Duroc line sires on carcass composition, meat quality and dry-cured ham acceptability.

Irene Cilla; J. Altarriba; L. Guerrero; M. Gispert; Luis Martínez; Carlos Moreno; José Antonio Beltrán; Maria Dolors Guàrdia; A. Diestre; J. Arnau; Pedro Roncalés

Carcasses of 399 malignant hyperthermia gene free pigs from crosses sired by three types of Duroc (Virgen de la Fuente, DU1; Diputación de Teruel, DU2; DanBred, DU3) were analyzed for carcass and meat quality. Carcass leanness and fat parameters were measured at the last rib and at the space between the 3rd and 4th last ribs counting from the last one. Weights, pH, electrical conductivity, colour and intramuscular fat were also measured. A sample of 133 legs per cross were processed by dry-curing. The ham portion including Biceps femoris, Semimembranosus and Semitendinosus muscles was evaluated for instrumental texture and colour, biochemical and sensory analyses and acceptability (trained panel and consumers). DU3 carcasses were well conformed but lean. DU1 carcasses had a lower conformation but higher marbling. DU2 carcasses were intermediate. Dry-cured hams from DU1-sired pigs had a higher overall acceptability, although fat content influenced a consumers group negatively. Leaner DU3 hams had the lowest acceptability.


Meat Science | 2001

The effect of breed-production systems on the myosin heavy chain 1, the biochemical characteristics and the colour variables of Longissimus thoracis from seven Spanish beef cattle breeds

Marta Gil; X. Serra; M. Gispert; M. Angels Oliver; C. Sañudo; B. Panea; J.L. Olleta; M.M. Campo; M. Oliván; K. Osoro; M.Dolores Garcı́a-Cachán; Rosario Cruz-Sagredo; Mercedes Izquierdo; Manuel Espejo; Marta Martín; J. Piedrafita

The effect of breed-production system on the myosin heavy chain 1 (MHC-I), the biochemical characteristics and the colour variables of longissimus thoracis (LT) from seven beef breeds was studied: Asturiana de la Montaña (AM), Asturiana de los Valles (AV), Avileña-Negra Ibérica (A-NI), Bruna dels Pirineus (BP), Morucha (MO), Pirenaica (PI) and Retinta (RE) (Age at slaughter between 368 and 541 days; carcass weight between 249 and 334 kg). Significant differences between breed-production systems were found for all traits evaluated. LT from the MO, a rustic type breed, was the most oxidative (MHC-I, 39.3%; isocitrate dehydrogenase activity, 52 nmol min(-1) mg(-1); pigment content, 188.4 μg acid haematin g(-1)) and showed a low L* value (32.6) and high a* and C* values (24 and 27.2, respectively). In terms of meat colour (L* and a*) the canonical discriminant analysis separated the breeds into two groups, the AV, the PI and the A-NI (the lightest ones) from the AM and the MO breeds (the reddest and darkest) whereas the BP showed an intermediate position. The RE and the A-NI were distinguished from the others by their high intramuscular fat content. Meat colour was affected by the muscle biochemical traits in the breed-production systems studied.


Meat Science | 2002

Effects of halothane gene and pre-slaughter treatment on meat quality and welfare from two pig crosses.

E. Fàbrega; X. Manteca; J. Font; M. Gispert; D. Carrión; A. Velarde; J.L. Ruiz-de-la-Torre; A. Diestre

Pigs from crosses of a Piétrain (Pi) and a Large White×Piétrain (LwPi) heterozygous (Nn) boar lines with Landrace×Large White homozygous negative (NN) sows, were used to study the effect of halothane gene and pre-slaughter treatment on animal welfare and meat quality. A total of 83 gilts (47 NN and 36 Nn) were assigned to a long treatment (3 h 15 min transport and 12 h lairage) and 73 (39 NN and 34 Nn) to a short treatment (30 min transport and 2 h lairage). Heart rate was recorded throughout loading and transport. Blood samples were collected before loading, after transport, and at exsanguination to measure cortisol, creatine phospho-kinase (CPK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Carcasses were classified and commercial cutting was carried out. Meat quality was assessed on the Longissimus thoracis muscle by measuring electrical conductivity (PQM), colour (Minolta CR 200 and Japanese scale) and ultimate pH. Loin drip losses were assessed at 24 h. Halothane carriers showed a higher increase in cortisol levels after transport and exsanguination in the long treatment (P<0.05) as well as in LDH and CPK after exsanguination in the short treatment (P<0.05). In this treatment, halothane-free pigs recovered during lairage when comparing LDH and CPK increases after exsanguination to their increases after transport. No effect of the halothane gene on heart rate was observed. Pi sired pigs were leaner and had higher yields of leg and loin compared with LwPi sired pigs (P<0.001), but no differences in meat quality were observed between crosses. Halothane carriers had a higher estimated lean content (P<0.01) and shoulder and leg yields (P<0.01), but poorer meat quality than non-carriers (i.e. higher incidence of PSE meat, P<0.001). Although pre-slaughter treatment and halothane genotype did not significantly affect pHu, significantly higher L*, a* and b* values found in the short treatment and Nn individuals indicated paler meat. These results suggest that for improving meat quality and welfare the halothane gene should be removed from breeding schemes.

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A. Velarde

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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A. Diestre

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Marta Gil

Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences

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X. Manteca

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Graham Plastow

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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B. Panea

University of Zaragoza

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C. Sañudo

University of Zaragoza

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J. Piedrafita

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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I. K. Kravchenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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