Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/6601
Title: Book of Abstracts of the 69th Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science
Other Titles: Consumer’s attitudes towards surgical castration of pigs in three Western Balkan countries
Authors: Tomasevic, I., Novakovic, S., Djekic, I., Nakov, D., Guerrero L. and Font-I-Furnols, M
Issue Date: 14-Aug-2018
Publisher: Wageningen Academic Publishers
Source: Tomasevic, I., Novakovic, S., Djekic, I., Nakov, D., Guerrero L. and Font-I-Furnols, M. 2018. Consumer’s attitudes towards surgical castration of pigs in three Western Balkan countries. Book of Abstracts of the 69th Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 27-31 August 2018, No. 24, 236, Advances in Animal Biosciences, 9(S1), S54. doi:10.1017/S2040470018000183 (abstract).
Project: COST Action IPEMA CA 15215 ‘Innovative approaches in pork production with entire males
Conference: The 69th Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 27-31 August 2018
Abstract: Surgical castration of male piglets without anaesthesia is performed routinely by farmers or veterinarians in Western Balkan countries to eliminate the risk of boar taint in pork meat. The aim of the study was to investigate consumers’ attitudes towards surgical castration of piglets in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (B&H) and Macedonia. A representative consumer survey was carried out in these three countries in 2017. Over twelve hundred (1,287) questionnaires were answered by pork eaters. Likert scale data were considered as ordinal values and non-parametric statistical tests have been used since data were not normally distributed. Mann-Whitney U test has been performed to compare the statements between genders and age and Kruskal-Wallis H test between countries (P=0.05). Western Balkan consumers agree (5.2±1.2) that surgical castration produces pain to the animal. They are significantly more likely to agree in Macedonia that meat from castrated pigs is of better quality (4.8±1.5) than in Serbia (4.6±1.3) and B&H (4.5±1.1). Macedonians agree the least (3.9±1.3) followed by more ambiguous consumers from Serbia (4.4±1.1) and B&H (4.5±1.0) that meat from castrated pigs is more expensive. Macedonians are also significantly more likely to disagree (3.6±1.6) that castration is not necessary, compared to Serbian (4.7±1.1) and B&H (4.9±0.9) consumers. On average, Western Balkan consumers, slightly disagree that meat from castrated pigs is leaner (3.7±1.1) and they neither agree nor disagree that they prefer to eat meat from castrated pigs (4.0±1.3) or that pig castration with vaccines improves pork quality (4.0±1.5). There are differences in consumer’s attitudes towards surgical castration by country of origin, but further work is needed to find segments of consumers according to their attitudes. The authors would like to acknowledge networking support by the COST Action IPEMA CA 15215 ‘Innovative approaches in pork production with entire males
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/6601
DOI: 10.3920/978-90-8686-871-1
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Food: Conference papers

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