This study investigates the use of multivariate analysis of milk fatty acid (FA) patterns to authenticate milk from different intensive dairy farming systems, characterized by varying forage-to-concentrate (F/C) ratios (70:30 or 60:40) and forage types (hay or maize silage). A total of 72 milk samples were collected: 50 from dairy farms, grouped according to the type and amount of forage in the cows’ diets, and 22 retail samples labeled as “High Quality.” A chemometric model was developed using linear discriminant analysis (LDA) with leave-one-out cross-validation. Key discriminant fatty acids such as C8:0 (caprylic acid), C12:1(lauroleic acid), iso C14:0 (isomyristic acid), C15:0 ante iso (12-methyltetradecanoic acid), C16:0 iso (14-methylpentadecanoic acid), anteiso C17:0 (14-methylhexadecanoic), C18:1 ω-7 (cis-vaccenico), C18:3 ω-6 (γ− linolenic acid), C20:5 ω-3 (eicosapentaenoic acid), C20:2 ω-3 (eicosadienoic acid), and C20:0 (arachidic acid), enabled a correct classification rate of 97 % based on the farming system. To validate the LDA model and assess its applicability to milk from grazing systems (F/C = 100), a blind test was conducted using 46 independent milk samples. The model achieved a classification accuracy of 95 %. Our results suggest that milk fatty acid patterns can be a reliable chemical biomarker for determining the milk’s origin.
Chemometric analysis of milk farming systems by fatty acid profile / A, Giulia Francesca Cifuni; Caparra, Pasquale; Morone, Giuseppe; Rubino, Roberto; Claps, Salvatore. - In: JOURNAL OF FOOD COMPOSITION AND ANALYSIS. - ISSN 0889-1575. - 147:(2025). [10.1016/j.jfca.2025.108031]
Chemometric analysis of milk farming systems by fatty acid profile
Pasquale Caparra;
2025-01-01
Abstract
This study investigates the use of multivariate analysis of milk fatty acid (FA) patterns to authenticate milk from different intensive dairy farming systems, characterized by varying forage-to-concentrate (F/C) ratios (70:30 or 60:40) and forage types (hay or maize silage). A total of 72 milk samples were collected: 50 from dairy farms, grouped according to the type and amount of forage in the cows’ diets, and 22 retail samples labeled as “High Quality.” A chemometric model was developed using linear discriminant analysis (LDA) with leave-one-out cross-validation. Key discriminant fatty acids such as C8:0 (caprylic acid), C12:1(lauroleic acid), iso C14:0 (isomyristic acid), C15:0 ante iso (12-methyltetradecanoic acid), C16:0 iso (14-methylpentadecanoic acid), anteiso C17:0 (14-methylhexadecanoic), C18:1 ω-7 (cis-vaccenico), C18:3 ω-6 (γ− linolenic acid), C20:5 ω-3 (eicosapentaenoic acid), C20:2 ω-3 (eicosadienoic acid), and C20:0 (arachidic acid), enabled a correct classification rate of 97 % based on the farming system. To validate the LDA model and assess its applicability to milk from grazing systems (F/C = 100), a blind test was conducted using 46 independent milk samples. The model achieved a classification accuracy of 95 %. Our results suggest that milk fatty acid patterns can be a reliable chemical biomarker for determining the milk’s origin.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


