Mounchili, Aboubakar. Study of an Outbreak of Off-Flavours in Bulk -Tank Milk. 2005. University of Prince Edward Island, Dissertation/Thesis, https://scholar2.islandarchives.ca/islandora/object/ir%3A21688.

Genre

  • Dissertation/Thesis
Contributors
Thesis advisor: Wichtel, Jeff
Author: Mounchili, Aboubakar
Date Issued
2005
Publisher
University of Prince Edward Island
Place Published
Charlottetown, PE
Extent
239
Abstract

Off-flavours in milk can be classified using the following general categories: oxidized flavour, feed flavour, rancidity, and other flavours (e.g., unclean, malty, salty, flat or chemical). Off-flavours in milk occur at a low incidence in all milk-producing areas of Canada, with "outbreaks" occurring periodically in certain localities for no clearly defined reason. However, in the late 1990s, the incidence of off-flavours in bulk-tank milk was relatively high in Prince Edward Island (PEI). From the dairy company records it appeared that about 50/330, or 15% of herds, were affected during the winter season of 1999–2000. This presented a major economic problem for producers and dairy industry personnel, and attracted a degree of unwelcome media attention in PEI.

To evaluate the reliability of the method used for identifying off-flavours in milk, a sensory study was carried out with a panel of four milk-tank operators, who constituted the milk flavour quality control personnel. Results showed that the panelists had satisfactory agreement in differentiating off-flavoured milk from milk of good quality. The inter-panelist agreement ranged from substantial (Kappa statistic > 0.61) to almost perfect (Kappa statistic > 0.81), whereas the intra-panelist agreement range was moderate (Kappa statistic > 0.41) to almost perfect, suggesting that in the absence of a more objective diagnostic tool, a panel of trained milk graders was appropriate for the monitoring of the flavour quality of bulk-tank milk.

Results from clustering analyses revealed that this outbreak had not only a seasonal pattern, but also a limited geographical distribution with cases concentrated mostly in intensive dairy farming regions (Queens and Prince counties), and most importantly, a spatial-temporal pattern that usually peaked during fall–early winter months (September to January). Three high-rate space-time clusters (two composed of herds that experienced feed off-flavour and one composed of herds with rancid off-flavour) and two low-rate (areas with low rate of off-flavour occurrence) were identified. It appeared that high-rate clusters tended to receive more precipitation than low-rate clusters during the clustered time frame; temperature data were not as conclusive. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).

Note

Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 65-09, Section: B, page: 4454.

Adviser: Jeff Wichtel.

Language

  • English

ETD Degree Name

  • Doctor of Philosophy

ETD Degree Level

  • Doctoral

ETD Degree Discipline

  • Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. Department of Health Management.
Degree Grantor
University of Prince Edward Island

Subjects

  • Biology, Veterinary Science
  • Health Sciences, Public Health
  • Agriculture, Food Science and Technology
ISBN
9780612938526
LAC Identifier
TC-PCU-21688

Department