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Quantifying the Impact of Different Dietary Rumen Modulating Strategies on Enteric Methane Emission and Productivity in Ruminant Livestock: A Meta-Analysis.
- Source :
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Animals (2076-2615) . Mar2024, Vol. 14 Issue 5, p763. 25p. - Publication Year :
- 2024
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Abstract
- Simple Summary: Consumer perception related to health and environmental issues associated with ruminant products, such as greenhouse gas emissions, has led to a paradigm shift aimed at mitigating the potential harmful effects of ruminant production. This study consolidated the current body of research on dietary rumen manipulating strategies with an aim to quantify their impact on rumen fermentation, enteric methane (CH4) emission and productivity by creating a global database on in vivo evaluation studies. A meta-analytical approach was used to achieve the study's aim and the result showed that nitrate, saponin, oils, biochar and 3-nitroxypropanol (3-NOP) were effective dietary rumen modulating strategies to mitigate enteric CH4 emission. Of these effective strategies, oils and 3-NOP provided a co-benefit in terms of improving productivity in ruminant livestock. Concentrate feeding equally improved production without any significant effect on enteric methane emissions. A meta-analysis was conducted with an aim to quantify the beneficial effects of nine different dietary rumen modulating strategies which includes: the use of plant-based bioactive compounds (saponin, tannins, oils, and ether extract), feed additives (nitrate, biochar, seaweed, and 3-nitroxy propanol), and diet manipulation (concentrate feeding) on rumen fermentation, enteric methane (CH4) production (g/day), CH4 yield (g/kg dry matter intake) and CH4 emission intensity (g/kg meat or milk), and production performance parameters (the average daily gain, milk yield and milk quality) of ruminant livestock. The dataset was constructed by compiling global data from 110 refereed publications on in vivo studies conducted in ruminants from 2005 to 2023 and anlayzed using a meta-analytical approach.. Of these dietary rumen manipulation strategies, saponin and biochar reduced CH4 production on average by 21%. Equally, CH4 yield was reduced by 15% on average in response to nitrate, oils, and 3-nitroxy propanol (3-NOP). In dairy ruminants, nitrate, oils, and 3-NOP reduced the intensity of CH4 emission (CH4 in g/kg milk) on average by 28.7%. Tannins and 3-NOP increased on average ruminal propionate and butyrate while reducing the acetate:propionate (A:P) ratio by 12%, 13.5% and 13%, respectively. Oils increased propionate by 2% while reducing butyrate and the A:P ratio by 2.9% and 3.8%, respectively. Use of 3-NOP increased the production of milk fat (g/kg DMI) by 15% whereas oils improved the yield of milk fat and protein (kg/d) by 16% and 20%, respectively. On the other hand, concentrate feeding improved dry matter intake and milk yield (g/kg DMI) by 23.4% and 19%, respectively. However, feed efficiency was not affected by any of the dietary rumen modulating strategies. Generally, the use of nitrate, saponin, oils, biochar and 3-NOP were effective as CH4 mitigating strategies, and specifically oils and 3-NOP provided a co-benefit of improving production parameters in ruminant livestock. Equally concentrate feeding improved production parameters in ruminant livestock without any significant effect on enteric methane emission. Therefore, it is advisable to refine further these strategies through life cycle assessment or modelling approaches to accurately capture their influence on farm-scale production, profitability and net greenhouse gas emissions. The adoption of the most viable, region-specific strategies should be based on factors such as the availability and cost of the strategy in the region, the specific goals to be achieved, and the cost–benefit ratio associated with implementing these strategies in ruminant livestock production systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20762615
- Volume :
- 14
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Animals (2076-2615)
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 175992612
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14050763