Abstract
Two hundred possums were collected from an area in Westland, New Zealand.
Their carcasses were macerated and total fat content was determined by chemical
means.
The reliability of existing indices (visual, kidney fat, back fat, marrow fat) for
predicting the proportion of total fat in the body was investigated. Two indices were
developed and tested; one based on fat depots in the mesogastrium, the other based
on deviations from a standardized weight for length. The index based on weight
deviations gives good results if derived from a large sample of animals, and has the
advantage that it can be used on live animals under sedation. The marrow fat index
gives good results if fat reserves are low, and the mesogastric index does at other
times, when estimates are obtained by autopsy of a few animals.
Analysis of variance showed that, within the population studied, time of the
year and a season-age interaction were the only significant sources of heterogeneity in
fat reserves.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
37 articles.
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