Nutritional evaluation of the lipid fraction of feral wild boar (Sus scrofa scrofa) meat.

TitleNutritional evaluation of the lipid fraction of feral wild boar (Sus scrofa scrofa) meat.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsQuaresma, M. a G., Alves S. P., Trigo-Rodrigues I., Pereira-Silva R., Santos N., Lemos J. P. C., Barreto a. S., & Bessa R. J. B.
JournalMeat science
Volume89
Pagination457-461
Accession Number21658850
KeywordsCholesterol, fatty acids, meat quality, Vitamin E, Wild boar
Abstract

Consumer increasing demand for wild boar meat and scarceness of data on its lipid fraction justified this study. The psoas major muscle collected from 25 feral wild boars was used to quantify the total lipid, total cholesterol, fatty acid (FA) profile, and vitamin E homologues. Intramuscular fat and total cholesterol contents averaged 4.64 g/100g of meat and 56.9 mg/100g of meat, respectively. No differences were found in FA composition between groups, except for 20:5n-3 that was higher in youngsters. All groups presented small concentrations of rumenic acid in meat (CLA; 0.24% of total FA). FA profile showed considerable resemblance with pork, while the vitamin E profile is marked by high concentrations of both alpha- (17.4 ± 3.3 μg/g meat) and gamma-tocopherols (2.6 ± 1.3 μg/g meat) and by the presence of other vitamin E homologues not previously reported in wild boar meat.