Effects of Weight, Castration and Rate of Gain on Muscle Fiber and Fat Cell Diameter in Two Ovine Muscles

Abstract
Meat tenderness and quality have been attributed to many factors including fiber diameter and intramuscular fat. Muscle fiber diameter has been extensively investigated because it is a logical first step in describing cell morphology. The size of the intramuscular fat cell is also a morphological feature of muscle and has been associated with changes in tissue development (Walls, 1960; Hammond, 1932). It has been agreed generally that the development of muscles during growth is due to an increase in the cross-sectional area of muscle fibers existing at birth (Hammond, 1932; Joubert, 1956; Staun, 1963; Venable, 1963). A number of workers have studied the relationship between muscle fiber size and tenderness in beef and pork (Hiner et al., 1953; Romans, Tuma and Tucker, 1965; Carpenter et al., 1963; Livingston, Blair and English, 1966). Other workers have reported significant variations in fat cell size in bovine and porcine muscle (Moody and Cassens, 1968; Moody, Kauffman and Cassens, 1968). Copyright © 1970. American Society of Animal Science . Copyright 1970 by American Society of Animal Science

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