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Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants

Methane, one of the important greenhouse gas, has a higher global warming potential than that of carbon dioxide. Agriculture, especially livestock, is considered as the biggest sector in producing anthropogenic methane. Among livestock, ruminants are the highest emitters of enteric methane. Methanog...

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Autores principales: Islam, Mahfuzul, Lee, Sang-Suk
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Society of Animal Sciences and Technology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6582924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31333869
http://dx.doi.org/10.5187/jast.2019.61.3.122
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author Islam, Mahfuzul
Lee, Sang-Suk
author_facet Islam, Mahfuzul
Lee, Sang-Suk
author_sort Islam, Mahfuzul
collection PubMed
description Methane, one of the important greenhouse gas, has a higher global warming potential than that of carbon dioxide. Agriculture, especially livestock, is considered as the biggest sector in producing anthropogenic methane. Among livestock, ruminants are the highest emitters of enteric methane. Methanogenesis, a continuous process in the rumen, carried out by archaea either with a hydrogenotrophic pathway that converts hydrogen and carbon dioxide to methane or with methylotrophic pathway, which the substrate for methanogenesis is methyl groups. For accurate estimation of methane from ruminants, three methods have been successfully used in various experiments under different environmental conditions such as respiration chamber, sulfur hexafluoride tracer technique, and the automated head-chamber or GreenFeed system. Methane production and emission from ruminants are increasing day by day with an increase of ruminants which help to meet up the nutrient demands of the increasing human population throughout the world. Several mitigation strategies have been taken separately for methane abatement from ruminant productions such as animal intervention, diet selection, dietary feed additives, probiotics, defaunation, supplementation of fats, oils, organic acids, plant secondary metabolites, etc. However, sustainable mitigation strategies are not established yet. A cumulative approach of accurate enteric methane measurement and existing mitigation strategies with more focusing on the biological reduction of methane emission by direct-fed microbials could be the sustainable methane mitigation approaches.
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spelling pubmed-65829242019-07-22 Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants Islam, Mahfuzul Lee, Sang-Suk J Anim Sci Technol Review Methane, one of the important greenhouse gas, has a higher global warming potential than that of carbon dioxide. Agriculture, especially livestock, is considered as the biggest sector in producing anthropogenic methane. Among livestock, ruminants are the highest emitters of enteric methane. Methanogenesis, a continuous process in the rumen, carried out by archaea either with a hydrogenotrophic pathway that converts hydrogen and carbon dioxide to methane or with methylotrophic pathway, which the substrate for methanogenesis is methyl groups. For accurate estimation of methane from ruminants, three methods have been successfully used in various experiments under different environmental conditions such as respiration chamber, sulfur hexafluoride tracer technique, and the automated head-chamber or GreenFeed system. Methane production and emission from ruminants are increasing day by day with an increase of ruminants which help to meet up the nutrient demands of the increasing human population throughout the world. Several mitigation strategies have been taken separately for methane abatement from ruminant productions such as animal intervention, diet selection, dietary feed additives, probiotics, defaunation, supplementation of fats, oils, organic acids, plant secondary metabolites, etc. However, sustainable mitigation strategies are not established yet. A cumulative approach of accurate enteric methane measurement and existing mitigation strategies with more focusing on the biological reduction of methane emission by direct-fed microbials could be the sustainable methane mitigation approaches. Korean Society of Animal Sciences and Technology 2019-05 2019-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6582924/ /pubmed/31333869 http://dx.doi.org/10.5187/jast.2019.61.3.122 Text en © Copyright 2019 Korean Society of Animal Science and Technology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Islam, Mahfuzul
Lee, Sang-Suk
Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
title Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
title_full Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
title_fullStr Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
title_full_unstemmed Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
title_short Advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
title_sort advanced estimation and mitigation strategies: a cumulative approach to enteric methane abatement from ruminants
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6582924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31333869
http://dx.doi.org/10.5187/jast.2019.61.3.122
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