Abstract :
The study was carried out to provide information on uniformity of commercial pigs on some of the most important traits
determining pork quality: carcass, loin, ham and shoulder weights, fatness, drip loss, pH and colour. Three batches of pigs raised
at the same farm and slaughtered at four different dates in the same commercial abattoir were considered. Batches included
halothane-free females and castrated males, Duroc and Pietrain sire lines and two slaughter weights, but a common maternal line.
The first batch was obtained using commercial Duroc sire boars, and included a total of 112 animals (56 castrated males and
56 females). The second batch used Duroc and Pietrain sire boars with the target to achieve two different final weights (105 and
115 kg live weight); 128 animals were controlled (64 castrated males and 64 females), 16 for each combination of sire boar, sex
and final weight. The last batch used only Pietrain sire boars with 96 controlled pigs (48 castrated males and 48 females). The
uniformity was measured by the coefficient of variation (CV) and the coefficient of dispersion (CD) for all data available, and for
groups of common sex, sire breed and slaughter weight. Differences in uniformity were tested among traits and groups by using
confidence intervals (CIs) at 95% confidence level (CI95%) for the CV and CD. Results showed a significantly lower uniformity for
drip loss (CV540.4%, CI95% 36.9% to 44.7%; CD532.1%, CI95% 28.7% to 35.4%) and backfat (CV522.8%, CI95% 21.1% to
24.8%; CD518.3%, CI95% 17.1% to 20.2%) the pH being the most uniform trait (CV53.2%, CI95% 3.0% to 3.5%; CD52.6%,
CI95% 2.4% to 2.9%). When comparing different ‘sire breed–sex–slaughter weight’ groups, no consistent sex and slaughter weight
differences in uniformity were found, but animals from Pietrain sire breed showed a tendency to be less uniform for carcass traits
than animals from Duroc sire breed. Nevertheless, variability within those groups was very high and often similar to that observed
when considering all the animals from all the groups. Small differences were found comparing uniformity when using the CV or
the CD. CIs of these coefficients have proved to be a simple and useful tool for testing differences in uniformity.
Keywords :
Coefficient of dispersion , homogeneity , Variation , pork , Coefficient of variation