Variation among individual beef cattle in methane ‐to‐carbon dioxide ratio measured under on‐farm conditions using the sniffer method

This study proposed a method for measuring the methane (CH4)/carbon dioxide (CO2) ratio from individual beef cattle under on-farm conditions and estimated the variance components of the CH4/CO2 ratio. Gas measurements were conducted using 166 Japanese Black cattle group-housed in pens equipped with individual feed bins. The gas containing the animal's breath was measured individually after concentrate feeding by covering the feed bin with a sheet with sampling inlets. Measurements were performed six times (three consecutive days, twice daily) per individual. Most of the sampled gas contained more than 1000  ppm of the mean background-corrected CO2, suggesting that the method proposed in this study successfully collected sufficient breath concentration to accurately measure the CH4/CO2 ratio. The between-animal variance accounted for 31.7% of the total variance in the CH4/CO2 ratio. The results showed that the gas collection method proposed in this study could be a useful tool for measuring the CH4/CO2 ratio under on-farm conditions. The variance component obtained from this study will help to establish protocols for generating data for genetic evaluation and performing dietary experiments with sufficient statistical power.
Source: Animal Science Journal - Category: Zoology Authors: Tags: RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research