Authentication of cow feeding and geographic origin on milk using visible and near-infrared spectroscopy
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
The ability of near-infrared spectroscopy to trace
cow feeding systems and farming altitude was tested
on 486 bulk milk samples from France and northwestern Italy. Milks were grouped into feeding systems according to the main forage in the diet. Partial least
square discriminant analysis correctly classified 95.5,
91.5, and 93.3% of pasture versus maize silage, hay,
and fermented herbage feeding systems, respectively.
Discrimination was slightly less successful when diets
with large proportions of the nondominant forage were
included in each group. Near-infrared spectroscopy
correctly discriminated no-pasture from pasture milk,
even with only 30% of pasture in the diet (5.4% crossvalidation error), and the error stabilized when pasture
exceeded 70% (2.5% error). Near-infrared spectroscopy
did not reliably trace milk geographic origin when the
feeding system effect was isolated from the altitude effect. These findings may be usefully exploited for the
authentication of dairy products.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
near-infrared spectroscopy; milk traceability; cow feeding; geographic origin
Elenco autori:
M. Coppa; B. Martin; C. Agabriel; C. Chassaing; C. Sibra; I. Constant; B. Graulet; D. Andueza
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