All handling practices followed the recommendations of the Directive 2010/63/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of animals used for scientific purposes and the CSIC Animal Experimentation Committee (protocol number 100102/2017-4) authorized all the procedures included in the experimental design.
2.2. Experimental Procedures
Animals were individually penned during the whole experimental period (nine weeks). Lambs were offered ad libitum the experimental diets once a day at 09:00 h and refusals were recorded daily and composited weekly to determine DM content. The amount of feed offered was readjusted daily in order to allow 10% refusals and fresh water was always available. Diets were pelleted to avoid feed selection by lambs.
All lambs were weighed once a week throughout the experimental period. On days 0, 35 and 63 blood samples were taken before morning feeding by jugular venipuncture into tubes containing lithium heparin. Tubes were placed in ice and then centrifuged (3520× g for 20 min at 4 °C) and plasma samples were frozen at −20 °C until analysis of biochemical profile. On days 35 and 63 another blood sample was obtained for acid-base status evaluation.
The last day of the experiment, lambs were transported to a commercial abattoir 2 h before slaughtering. The transfer of the animals from the research facilities to the abattoir lasted approximately 15 min (without intermediate stops), and the handling of animals during transportation and slaughtering followed strictly the Council Regulation (EC) No. 1099/2009 on the protection of animals at the time of killing. Feed had been withdrawn, and after an 8-h fasting, lambs were weighed, stunned, slaughtered by exsanguination from the jugular vein, eviscerated and skinned. In four representative lambs of each group, the rumen was dissected and the whole ruminal contents were mixed and strained through four layers of cheesecloth. The pH of the filtered fluid was measured immediately. Then, a 1 mL sample was added to 1 mL of 0.5 N HCl for ammonia-N determination, and a sample of 0.8 mL was added to 0.5 mL of deproteinizing solution (20 g metaphosphoric acid and 0.6 g crotonic acid/L in 0.5 N HCl) for volatile fatty acids (VFA) analysis.
After sampling, the strained rumen fluid was used for an in vitro assay to assess rumen fermentation by incubating the experimental diet that the animal had received during the trial. Rumen fluid was mixed with a buffered culture medium [
17] in a 1:4 proportion. This medium had been extensively reduced with continuous bubbling of CO
2 and warmed to 39 °C. Incubations were performed in 120 mL serum bottles in which 300 mg of DM substrate (experimental diet) had been weighed. Rumen fluid from each animal was used as a separate inoculum, thus having four replicates per treatment.
Two bottles per animal and blanks were included in the incubation trial. After dispensing anaerobically 30 mL of diluted rumen fluid, each bottle was sealed with rubber stoppers and aluminum seals and all the bottles were placed in an incubator at 39 °C for 24 h. At the end of the incubation total gas production was determined following the method proposed by Theodorou et al. [
18] by using a pressure transducer (Delta Ohm DTP704-2BGI, Herter Instrument SL, Barcelona, Spain) and a calibrated syringe. The syringe plunger was withdrawn until the gas pressure in the head-space of the bottles was returned to ambient pressure, as indicated by a reading of zero on the display of the transducer, and a gas sample (10 mL) was taken into a 10 mL vacuum tube (Venoject, Terumo Europe N.V., Leuven, Belgium) for methane analysis. Bottles were swirled in ice to stop fermentation, and then opened to measure pH in the incubation medium and samples for ammonia·-N and VFA analysis were taken as previously described.
DM content of feeds and refusals were determined according to ISO 6496:1999 [
19]. Ash and CP in feed samples were analyzed following the ISO 5984:2002 [
20] and ISO 5983:2009 [
21] procedures, respectively. Neutral-detergent fiber (NDF) and acid-detergent fiber (ADF) were analyzed as described by Van Soest et al. [
22] using an Ankom fiber analyzer (Ankom Technology Corp., Macedon, NY, USA).
Frozen plasma samples were defrosted overnight at 4 °C and aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), total cholesterol, glucose, triglycerides, calcium, phosphorus, urea, creatinine, total proteins, and albumin were determined in a biochemical profile autoanalyzer ILAB 650 (Instrumentation Laboratory, Lexington, MA, USA). Blood acid-base status was evaluated in fresh blood samples by determining pH, bicarbonate (HCO3−), CO2 pressure (pCO2), anion gap, total CO2 (tCO2), Na, K, and Cl concentrations in a VetStat blood gas and electrolytes analyzer (Idexx, Barcelona, Spain).
Concentrations of ammonia-N and VFA were determined as described by García-Martínez et al. [
23] using a GC-2010 gas chromatograph (Shimadzu, Duisburg, Germany) and CH
4 was analyzed by gas chromatography as described by Martínez et al. [
24].
Average daily gain (g/day) was estimated as the regression coefficient (slope) of body weight against time. The feed conversion ratio was obtained dividing the average daily DMI by the estimated ADG. Residual feed intake (RFI), an index of feed efficiency, was calculated as described by Koch et al. [
25]. Briefly, estimated feed intake was calculated as the regression of the real feed intake against mid-test metabolic weight and average daily gain. The difference between the actual and the estimated feed intake represents the RFI.
2.3. Carcass and Meat Characteristics
Carcass weight was recorded before (HCW) and after chilling (CCW) at 4 °C for 24 h and refrigeration losses were calculated. Dressing percentage was calculated as a proportion of the CCW on slaughter weight.
The color parameters [L* (lightness), a* (redness), and b* (yellowness) (D65 illuminant, 10° visual angle, SCI mode, 11 mm aperture for illumination and 8 mm for measurement)] of subcutaneous fat were measured in the lumbar region with a Minolta CM-2002 chroma meter (Konica-Minolta Sensing, Inc., Germany) using the CIELAB system [
26]. The hue angle (h*), which indicates a combination of red and yellow (0° is red; 90° is yellow), was calculated as arc tangent (b*/a*), and the chroma (C*), an index of purity of color that describes the vividness or dullness of a color (0 is dull; 60 is vivid), was computed as
. The pH value from the
Longissimus thoracis muscle (left side) was measured 24 h postmortem at the sixth rib using a Metrohm
® pH meter equipped with a penetrating electrode.
Carcasses were halved carefully and the left side was then divided into commercial cuts as described by Colomer-Rocher et al. [
27] and weighed. Legs, loin, and fore ribs comprised the higher priced joints, shoulders were the medium price joints, and the lower priced joints included breast, neck, and tail. Dissection of the leg was performed using the method of Fisher and de Boer [
28] to determine the tissue composition.
The
Longissimus thoracis (LT) and
lumborum (LL) muscles were removed from the ribs. Four slices from the distal end of the
L. thoracis, each 2.5 cm thick, were cut and in two sets of two slices per set were placed on impermeable polypropylene trays, which were wrapped with polyvinylchloride cling film and refrigerated stored (4 °C) in darkness. The color was determined after one hour of cutting (day one; approx. 26 h after slaughter) on the surface of the two slices of one of the sets and on those of the other set after six days of storage (day six). Color was determined in duplicate on each of the slices following the procedure previously described. The remaining portion of
L. thoracis muscle, i.e., the portion of muscle not used for color determination, was trimmed to eliminate connective tissue, minced in a food processor, and frozen at −20 °C until analysis. Chemical composition was determined in accordance with the methods described by the Association of Official Analytical Chemist [
29].
The LL muscle was used to determine cooking losses and hardness (shear force). The muscle from each carcass was transversely divided in two similar portions (distal and caudal), which were randomly allotted to two different measurement times (day one or day six). The muscle portion for day one was immediately weighed, vacuum packaged, and cooked in a water bath at 80 °C for 40 min, cooled with tap water, removed from the packaging bag, dried on its surface with filter paper and weighed again. Cooking loss was then determined as the difference in weight between cooked and raw meat, expressed as percentage of raw meat. The other portion was refrigerated stored for six days under the same conditions as described for the
L. thoracis (color determination) before being vacuum packaged, cooked, cooled, and weighed. Afterwards, three cuboid core samples (square cross-section (1 cm by 1 cm) and with the long axis (3 cm) parallel to the predominant muscle fiber orientation) were obtained from the cooked LL muscle portions (days one and six) and subjected to Warner–Bratzler shear force analysis following the procedure described by Santos et al. [
30].
2.4. Calculations and Statistical Analysis
Data from growth performance, feeding costs, carcass characteristics, in vivo rumen parameters, tissue and meat chemical composition were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS (SAS Inst. Inc., Cary, NC, USA), including the fixed effect of the diet in the model and animal nested within the diet as residual error. Initial BW was also included as a covariate in the model but it was removed as the effect was non-significant (p > 0.05). In vitro data (average of the two values per animal) were analyzed using a mixed model with the fixed effect of the diet and the animal nested within the diet as random effect.
Data from blood acid-base status and biochemical parameters, texture, cooking losses, and color of the meat were analyzed as a repeated measures model using the MIXED procedure of SAS. The animal was nested within the diet and considered the experimental unit to test the effect of diet. Different covariance matrices were evaluated on the basis of Schwarz’s Bayesian information criteria. Plasma values at day zero were used as covariate, the covariate being removed from the model when its effect was not significant (p > 0.05). The effect of the covariate was significant (p < 0.05) for glucose, albumin, urea, AST, creatinine, Ca, and P concentrations and hence adjusted mean values were used.