# The Effect of Diet Acid Detergent Fiber Content on Finishing Lamb Meat Fatty Acid Composition, Tenderness and Stability

**Authors:** Ockert Bernard Einkamerer, Abraham Vlok Ferreira, Michael Denis Fair, Arnold Hugo

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/fsn3.71542 · 2026-02-15

## TL;DR

Increasing fiber in lamb diets changes meat fat composition, boosting healthy fatty acids but not affecting tenderness or color.

## Contribution

Shows how dietary fiber affects lamb meat fatty acids, particularly improving the n-6:n-3 ratio.

## Key findings

- Higher ADF increased α-linolenic acid, CLA, and n-3 fatty acids in lamb meat.
- The n-6:n-3 ratio improved with higher ADF, though it exceeded the optimal threshold.
- Meat tenderness and color stability were not significantly affected by ADF content.

## Abstract

The effect of incrementally increasing the acid detergent fiber (ADF) content in low fiber finishing diets on meat fatty acid (FA) composition, tenderness and stability of finishing South African Mutton Merino (SAMM) wether lambs was investigated. Four dietary treatments were formulated, only differing in ADF content, namely the control (CON), ADF1, ADF2 and ADF3 at 46.8, 59.3, 63.8, and 79.9 g ADF/kg dry matter (DM), respectively. All lambs were slaughtered at a commercial abattoir at the end of a production study of 67 days. Loin chops were evaluated for FA composition, stability and tenderness. Only the α‐linolenic acid (CON vs. ADF1 and ADF3) and conjugated linoleic acid (CLA c9,t11: CON vs. ADF1 and ADF2) composition of lamb muscle tissue was affected by ADF content, with both the lowest in the CON treatment. The oleic acid, total monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA) and lipid omega‐6 (n‐6): omega‐3 (n‐3) ratio decreased, whereas linoleic acid, α‐linolenic acid, CLAc9,t11, total polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), n‐6 and n‐3 content, as well as PUFA:SFA ratio were increased following an increased ADF content. Longissimus color stability (apart from day 2 L* and day 8 b* values) and shear force were left unaffected. It was concluded that the ADF content of a low fiber finishing diet fed to SAMM lambs did affect meat FA composition. The n‐6:n‐3 ratio was favorably affected by a high ADF content and more research is needed in this regard.

Increasing the acid detergent fiber (ADF) content in low‐fiber finishing diets altered the fatty acid composition of South African Mutton Merino lamb meat, mainly by increasing α‐linolenic acid, CLA (c9,t11), total n‐3, and PUFA content. Muscle fatty acid composition was less affected than subcutaneous adipose tissue, where higher ADF increased unsaturated and n‐3 fatty acids while improving the n‐6:n‐3 ratio. Meat tenderness and color stability remained unaffected, though the n‐6:n‐3 ratio exceeded the optimal 4:1 threshold.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** α-linolenic acid (PubChem CID 5280934), oleic acid (PubChem CID 445639), linoleic acid (PubChem CID 5280450), SFA (PubChem CID 5388925), n-6 (PubChem CID 11966305), n-3 (PubChem CID 21908)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Tenderness (MESH:D063806)
- **Chemicals:** linoleic acid (MESH:D019787), Acid (MESH:D000143), CLA (MESH:D044243), alpha-linolenic acid (MESH:D017962), FA (MESH:D005227), MUFA (MESH:D005229), CLAc9,t11 (-), PUFA (MESH:D005231), oleic acid (MESH:D019301)
- **Species:** Ovis aries (domestic sheep, species) [taxon 9940]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907520/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907520