Ability of visible spectroscopy to authenticate pasture-fed lambs in three breeds
Résumé
The development of rapid analytical methods for diet authentication and quality assessments in animal products is under active investigation. We assessed the ability of visible spectroscopy to distinguish pasture-fed (P) from stall concentrate-fed (S) lamb carcasses using a large database totalling 1054 (418 P and 636 S) male lambs from three sheep breeds, i.e. 148 P and 258 S Romane breed, 102 P and 92 S Ile-de-France breed, and 168 P and 286 S Limousine breed lambs. The reflectance spectrum of perirenal fat was measured 24 h postmortem at wavelengths between 400 and 700 nm using a portable spectrophotometer. We quantified light absorption by carotenoids in the 450-510 nm area (method 1, M1) and performed a multivariate analysis over the full set of reflectance data (method 2, M2). Using M1, the proportion of correctly-classified S lambs was 100%, 95.8% and 93.5% in Romane, Limousine and Ile-de-France breeds, respectively, while the proportion of correctly-classified P lambs was 87.2%, 81.5% and 66.7% in Romane, Limousine and Ile-de-France breeds, respectively. Using M2, the proportion of correctly-classified S lambs was 99.6%, 99.6% and 97.9% in Romane, Limousine and Ile-de-France breeds, respectively, while the proportion of correctly-classified P lambs was 89.9%, 85.7% and 92.2% in Romane, Limousine and Ile-de- France breeds, respectively.