Abstract

Simple SummaryBoar taint is an unpleasant smell and taste of fat of uncastrated male pigs. Growing welfare concerns are pushing towards a ban on the common practice of castrating male piglets as a means to prevent boar taint. This pushes the pork industry to apply alternative strategies to prevent the consumption of tainted of meat. Detecting boar taint is an important aspect of solving this problem, both as a control strategy in slaughterhouses and in boar taint research. This study provides a training protocol and scoring method as well as recommendations for evaluating boar taint.Trained expert panels are used routinely in boar taint research, with varying protocols for training of panelists and scoring methods. We describe a standardized process for training and scoring, to contribute to standardize the olfactory detection of boar taint. Three experiments are described in which we (1) evaluate the importance of training and the effect of the previous sample, (2) determine detection thresholds on strips and in fat for our panel, and (3) test priming panelists before boar taint evaluation. For the final evaluation of boar taint, we propose a consistent three-person evaluation scoring on a 0–4 scale using a final mean score of 0.5 as the cut-off for boar taint. This gave an optimal sensitivity of 0.81 and a specificity of 0.56 compared to chemical cut-offs. Even limited training proved useful, but priming assessors with strips did not improve the evaluation of fat samples. Detection thresholds were higher in fat compared to strips, except for indole. We recommend panelists to always smell a non-tainted control sample after a tainted one as a ‘reset’ mechanism, before continuing. For longitudinal studies, we additionally advise to set up an expert panel with a fixed number of assessors performing each evaluation in duplicate.

Highlights

  • Boar taint is an unpleasant odor/taste caused by androstenone (AND), skatole (SKA), and to some extent indole (IND) present in the fat tissue of uncastrated male pigs [1,2,3]

  • Subsamples from the studies were taken to evaluate the olfactory panel performance compared to chemical analysis

  • Exactly 3 trained panelists per sample were used in stage II and III instead of 2–5 panelist in stage I, since the number of panelists was found to be positively correlated to the boar taint risk

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Summary

Introduction

Boar taint is an unpleasant odor/taste caused by androstenone (AND), skatole (SKA), and to some extent indole (IND) present in the fat tissue of uncastrated male pigs [1,2,3]. This is generally done by offering a discriminatory test with AND on smell strips or dissolved in water After this selection procedure, retained candidates are acquainted with the odors from heated pork fat and trained with smell strips containing boar taint compounds. They are taught the scoring system and given feedback about their scoring during training until they perform the tests with a minimum of mistakes [8,9,10,11]. In order to pass this step, the candidate had to be able to perform this test with max 2 mistakes and had to be able to correct his/her assessment after receiving feedback on the odd sample and redoing the test in a different order

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