© 2025. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Federal funding for public media has been eliminated — we need your help to continue serving south central Indiana
Some web content from Indiana Public Media is unavailable during our transition to a new web publishing platform. We apologize for the inconvenience.

WFIU is conducting upgrades to essential studio equipment. These upgrades may cause temporary interruptions to WFIU and WFIU2’s broadcasting and streaming. Thank you for your patience.

The Difference Between White And Dark Meat

(Wikimedia Commons)
(Wikimedia Commons)

What's the difference between white and dark meat? Beef if mostly dark meat and fish is mostly white meat. Turkeys, however, have both, so they offer a good illustration of the difference.

Essentially, the two colors indicate two different types of muscle. Dark meat has muscle fibers called "slow twitch." These fibers are useful for long stretches of regular activity, like walking.

Whie meat has muscle fibers called "fast twitch." As their name suggests, these fibers are useful for short bursts of movement, like flying up to a nearby tree branch. In other words, slow twitch muscles have a constant workout, but fast twitch muscles rest up, until they're needed for suddent action.

Slow twitch muscles contain a lot of something called myoglobin. Myoglobin is a protein in muscle cells that carries oxygen. Since slow twitch muscles need a lot of oxygen to fuel long periods of movement, they have lots of myoglobin. And myoglobin, it turns out, is richly pigmented, meaning an abundance of this protein gives dark meat its brown shading.

Fast twitch muscles, on the other hand, get their fuel from glycogen. This is a carbohydrate, and unlike oxygen, it's good for quick activity. Because fast twitch muscles don't need as much oxygen as their slow twitch counterparts, there's much less myoglobin. Without myoglobin's pigmentation, white meat looks, well, white.

Turkeys spend a lot of time walking and standing. This means that their legs use slow twitch muscles, so the leg meat is dark. But since the birds don't use their wing and breast muscles much, except for short bursts, these upper muscles are fast twitch, and therefore white meat.

What's the difference between white and dark meat? Beef if mostly dark meat and fish is mostly white meat. Turkeys, however, have both, so they offer a good illustration of the difference.

Essentially, the two colors indicate two different types of muscle. Dark meat has muscle fibers called "slow twitch." These fibers are useful for long stretches of regular activity, like walking. 

Whie meat has muscle fibers called "fast twitch." As their name suggests, these fibers are useful for short bursts of movement, like flying up to a nearby tree branch. In other words, slow twitch muscles have a constant workout, but fast twitch muscles rest up, until they're needed for suddent action.

Slow twitch muscles contain a lot of something called myoglobin. Myoglobin is a protein in muscle cells that carries oxygen. Since slow twitch muscles need a lot of oxygen to fuel long periods of movement, they have lots of myoglobin. And myoglobin, it turns out, is richly pigmented, meaning an abundance of this protein gives dark meat its brown shading.

Fast twitch muscles, on the other hand, get their fuel from glycogen. This is a carbohydrate, and unlike oxygen, it's good for quick activity. Because fast twitch muscles don't need as much oxygen as their slow twitch counterparts, there's much less myoglobin. Without myoglobin's pigmentation, white meat looks, well, white.

Turkeys spend a lot of time walking and standing. This means that their legs use slow twitch muscles, so the leg meat is dark. But since the birds don't use their wing and breast muscles much, except for short bursts, these upper muscles are fast twitch, and therefore white meat.

Stay Connected
Walker Rhea has a B.A. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University. In addition to reading and writing about science, he enjoys performing live comedy in Bloomington, IN and studying dead languages.