4 research outputs found
Analysis of stress indicators for evaluation of animal welfare and meat quality in traditional and Jewish slaughtering
Sixty Charolais male beef cattle of eight months of age were divided into two groups according to the slaughtering method, i.e., traditional or Kosher (religious Jewish rite). The aim of the study was to detect and compare the plasma concentrations of cortisol and catecholamines (dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine), by Elisa and HPLC test. These four stress indicators were evaluated during three different stages of each animal productive life: on the farm (step 1), after transportation (step 2) and during bleeding (step 3). The patterns of the parameters measured were similar and, interestingly, revealed significant changes throughout the three steps considered. The greatest variation between the two methods of slaughtering was observed in step 3, where we found a statistically significant difference with all the parameters except epinephrine. In the animals slaughtered by the religious rite, cortisol, dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine were 68.70 ± 30.61 nmol/L; 868.43 ± 508.52 ng/L; 3776.20 ± 1918.44 ng/L; and 4352.20 ± 3730.15 ng/L, respectively, versus 45.08 ± 14.15 nmol/L; 513.87 ± 286.32 ng/L; 3425.57 ± 1777.39 ng/L; and 3279.97 ± 1954.53 ng/L, respectively, in the other animals. This suggests that the animals slaughtered by the Kosher rite are subjected to higher stress conditions at the exsanguination phase. The animals slaughtered by the religious Jewish rite showed lower cortisol and catecholamine levels on the farm (step 1) and after transportation to the slaughterhouse (step 2). This was likely because the animals selected at the end of step 1 by the Rabbis for the religious rite are usually the most docile and gentle
Determination of plasmatic cortisol for evaluation of animal welfare during slaughter.
The plasmatic cortisol levels of 60
eight-month-old calves (Charolais breed)
were measured as stress indicators resulting
from two types of slaughter: traditional and
religious rite. The plasmatic cortisol levels
were evaluated during three different stages
of their productive life: during growth, after
transport and during slaughter. The thirty
calves slaughtered after stunning showed
plasmatic cortisol values of 4.85±3.2;
36.36±12.2 and 45.08±14.1 nmol/L, during
growth, in the slaughterhouse stables and
during exsanguination, respectively.
Conversely, the average values found in the
thirty calves subjected to ritual slaughter
were 2.96±1.2; 31.65±25.4 and 68.70±30.6
nmol/L. The results of the study showed
that animal welfare should be improved in
both forms of slaughter
Kosher slaughter paradigms: Evaluation of slaughterhouse inspection procedures.
Slaughter by Jewish religious rite is the killing of an animal by cutting the trachea and oesophagus and major blood vessels using a very sharp blade. This operation is subject to strict rules laid down by religious authorities that characterize its sacredness. The aim of the study was to evaluate the specific criteria inherent in the Jewish religious rite, by analysing reject rates during the different phases. In this study, 52.4% of the carcasses failed to quality as Kosher, with 22.9% being rejected due to pulmonary lesions and only 3% for miscuts. The study also revealed legal vacuums in the field of labelling rules