Leveraging milk mid-infrared spectroscopy to authenticate animal welfare, farming practices, and dairy systems of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2025
Abstract:
Increasing consumer concerns underscore the importance of verifying the practices and origins of food,
especially certified premium products. The aim of this
study was to evaluate the ability of Fourier-transform
mid-infrared (FT-MIR) spectroscopy to authenticate
animal welfare parameters, farming practices, and dairy
systems. Data on farm characteristics were obtained
from the Parmigiano Reggiano Consortium in northern
Italy. Animal welfare data were collected by trained
veterinarians using the assessment protocol developed
by the Italian National Reference Center for Animal
Welfare (CReNBA), and bulk milk test-day data were
obtained from the laboratory of the Breeders Association
of the Emilia Romagna Region. A merged final dataset of
12,083 bulk FT-MIR spectra records from 949 farms was
created. Using a nonhierarchical clustering approach, the
farms were classified into 5 dairy systems: 2 traditional
systems comprising farms located in either the Apennines or the Po Plain; 2 modern systems, one that used
TMR and one did not; and one traditional dairy system
comprising farms rearing local breeds. To evaluate the
ability of bulk milk to capture differences in farming
systems, we conducted an ANOVA on milk composition.
The linear models included the following effects: season,
dairy system, farm, and the interaction between dairy
system and season. The effect of the dairy system was
significant for all milk composition traits. A 10-iteration
linear discriminant analysis was used to evaluate the discriminative ability of the spectra in classifying farming
practices and dairy systems. The average results of the
area under the receiver operating characteristic curve revealed good authentication performance for genetic type
(0.98), housing system (0.91), and feeding system (0.89),
and medium-low authentication performance for geographical area (0.70); poor results were obtained for the
percentage of concentrate in the diet and animal welfare
parameters (0.57–0.64). With regard to dairy systems,
the best result was obtained when dairy systems were
grouped into 2 simplified categories, traditional versus
modern (0.89), instead of the 5 categories (0.87). The
results of this study show that FT-MIR is a useful tool
for authenticating farming practices and dairy systems,
but not animal welfare as defined by CReNBA evaluation
criteria. Our results show that infrared spectroscopy has
the potential to authenticate dairy products and quality
label certifications.
Key words:dairy c
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
dairy cow, animal welfare, quality labels,
Fourier-transform mid-infrared, discriminant analysis
Elenco autori:
Ramirez Mauricio, Marco Aurelio; Berton, Marco; Amalfitano, Nicolò; Giannuzzi, Diana; Pegolo, Sara; Raniolo, Salvatore; Nocetti, Marco; Negrini, Riccardo; Coppa, Mauro; Martin, Bruno; Schiavon, Stefano; Gallo, Luigi; Sturaro, Enrico; Cecchinato, Alessio
Link alla scheda completa:
Link al Full Text:
Pubblicato in: