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Sharon Omahen


University of Georgia




University of Georgia researchers are working to raise
farmers’
profits by trimming the amount of fat in pigs.



“The idea is to produce a leaner pig with a better ratio of
meat
carcass value to fat carcass value,” said Roger Dean, an animal
scientist with the UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences.




Less fat would mean more profit for farmers who are now losing
money on fat waste.




“There was a time when fat was more valuable, and farmers
could
make money by selling lard and fat by-products,” Dean said. “Now
the by-products aren’t as plentiful, so fat doesn’t have the
economic value it once had.”



A fatter pig doesn’t make more profit



Farmers also lose money in feed costs, too, when they feed a
plump pig.




“Fat has an awful lot of energy in it,” Dean said. “When a
farmer
feeds a pig a lot of corn all winter long, he doesn’t like seeing
that fat being cut out and thrown away as waste.”




So how do you make a leaner pig without putting the pig on a
diet?



Dean, his UGA colleagues and researchers from the U.S.
Department
of Agriculture are working together to identify the genes
connected with fat development and fat-cell reproduction.



“By identifying these genes we can discover what regulates
them,”
he said. “Our hope is that if we can understand them, we can
control them genetically.”



The researchers are also interested in finding out why these
genes react differently in individual animals.



Searching for and studying fat genes



“We want to know why the genes that control fat development
make
some pigs fatter than others,” Dean said. “There are probably
more genetic differences among individuals and between breeds
that make some fatter than others.”



Once this is determined, farmers will know which breeds are
the
best lean-meat producers and which individuals are the best to
select as breeding stock.



“We know a great deal about the genes that are involved, but
we’ve got a long road ahead,” Dean said. “The work has progressed
a long way, not only in our lab, but labs all around the
country.”