Meat Quality of Pure Breeds of Swine
The ultimate goal of pork production is to satisfy
consumers - both domestically and internationally. Genetic differences
in pork quality among swine breeds have been shown in several large industry
quality evaluation programs. These differences give the purebred pork
industry an opportunity to design superior pork products for specific
markets.
The National Genetic Evaluation Program, coordinated
by the National Pork Producers Council, was designed to identify differences
between genetic lines as they are used in commercial pork production.
This project provides an unbiased genetic evaluation to producers of all
sizes. A very high level of statistical accuracy and extensive sampling
of many genetic lines was built into the program so producers will have
confidence in using the results to guide their genetic programs.
Some of the results of pure breed performance
regarding several important loin quality traits are shown in the following
table:
| Breed |
Color1 |
IMF, %2 |
PH3 |
Instron4 |
Juiciness5 |
| Duroc |
23.2 |
4.27 |
5.72 |
5.85 |
5.85 |
| Hampshire |
20.8 |
2.61 |
5.56 |
6.18 |
6.18 |
| Landrace |
26.3 |
2.55 |
5.64 |
6.32 |
6.32 |
| Yorkshire |
23.0 |
2.51 |
5.71 |
6.36 |
6.36 |
These results support the use of Duroc seedstock for
the highest quality pork due to excellent IMF, Instron and juiciness,
however all four breeds produce very acceptable pork. Industry benchmarks,
when evaluated by the National Pork Producers Council, state that at least
2% IMF is needed for consumer acceptance, with all four brands meeting
this standard.
Rodney Goodwin, Ph.D., Director of Research
National Pork Producers Council
|