Abstract

Control and quercetin dihydrate-supplemented (2 g/kg) feeds were fed to 32 New Zealand White rabbits (both sexes) from 5 to 12 weeks old. Slaughter weight, carcass and organ weights, meat yields and physical and proximate meat quality were determined. Quercetin increased the hindleg meat:bone ratio (P < .001) by reducing hindleg bone weight (P = .01), contrary to the current understanding of the effect of quercetin on the skeletal system. However, this and the increase in skin weight (P = .03) may have been due to the effects of quercetin on connective tissue. Sex affected spleen weight (P = .04; female > male), head weight (P < .001; male > female), reference carcass yield (P = .02, female > male) and loin pHu (P = .02; male > female), without commercial implications. Other physical and chemical meat quality traits were not affected by diet or sex.

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