Animal Science, Department of

 

Nebraska Beef Cattle Reports

Date of this Version

2026

Citation

2026 Nebraska Beef Cattle Report, pages 110-111, MP-121, University of Nebraska Extension, 2026

Comments

Copyright 2026, Board of Regents, University of Nebraska. Used by permission

Abstract

Summary with Implications

This study investigated the relationship between carcass weight and the development of atypical dark cutting (ATDC) beef by examining differences in chilling rates, muscle metabolism, and meat quality traits. Forty-four beef carcasses (heavy weight, HW, 510.17 ± 4.6 lb.; light weight, LW, 399.21 ± 4.6 lb.) were monitored postmortem for temperature, pH, and metabolite levels. LW carcasses cooled faster from 6 to 24 hours postmortem and exhibited higher pH at 12 hours, darker lean, and lower tenderness compared to HW carcasses. Elevated levels of glycogen and glucose-6-phosphate were observed in LW carcasses, suggesting that faster chilling may alter muscle metabolism and contribute to ATDC beef characteristics. The findings show carcass weight influences chilling dynamics thus generating both metabolic changes and disparities in quality between HW and LW carcasses. Still more research is needed to better understand to what extent chilling would need to be modified in order to alleviate dark lean in LW carcasses.

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