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A comparative study of muscle-bone relationships in the hind limb of goats and sheep
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2010
Abstract
Muscle to bone weight relationships within anatomical regions (proximal-distal division into pelvic, thigh and lower leg groups) and subregions (division within regions into gluteal, intrinsic pelvic, cranial, caudal and medial thigh, and cranial and caudal lower leg groups) of the hind limb and also of its most important muscles (no. = 11) were compared between goats and sheep using the method of multivariate analysis of the centred data. In this comparison, a total of 39 animals was considered: 13 male kids of the Alpine breed (K) and a sample of 26 male lambs derived from different breeds or crossbreeds representing, in equal numbers, lambs having good conformation (LGC) and poor conformation (LPC). Lambs were chosen on the basis of the hindlimb length the means of which were 22·9 (s.e. 1·5), 29·3 (s.e. 1·8) and 29·1 (s.e. 2·5) cm for LGC, LPC, and K, respectively. Corresponding cold carcass weights were 19·71 (s.e. 347), 17·28 (s.e. 1·77) and 10·84 (s.e. 0·56) kg.
In both comparisons (K-LGC and K-LPC) the two species were systematically distinguished by the size of the following ratios: (pelvic muscles/os coxae + leg muscles /tibia) relative to thigh muscles/femur (for regions), which was lower in lambs than in kids; intrinsic pelvic muscles/os coxae relative to caudal thigh muscles/femur (for subregions), which was higher in kids than in lambs. For individual muscles, they were distinguished by the size of the following ratios: rectus (emoris/femur relative to semimembranosus/femur (or gluteus medius/os coxae) in the comparison K-LGC, which was higher in lambs than in kids, and vastus lateralis/femur relative to sum of pectineus + gracilis/femur (or gastrocemius/tibia) in the comparison K-LPC, which was lower in kids than in lambs. The results show that the muscle-bone ratios of the anatomical regions, subregions and the most commercially important muscles in the hindlimb can be used as discriminant characteristics of species.
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- Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1991
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