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Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods

The contribution of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from ruminant production systems varies between countries and between regions within individual countries. The appropriate quantification of GHG emissions, specifically methane (CH(4)), has raised questions about the correct reporting of GHG invento...

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Autores principales: Tedeschi, Luis Orlindo, Abdalla, Adibe Luiz, Álvarez, Clementina, Anuga, Samuel Weniga, Arango, Jacobo, Beauchemin, Karen A, Becquet, Philippe, Berndt, Alexandre, Burns, Robert, De Camillis, Camillo, Chará, Julián, Echazarreta, Javier Martin, Hassouna, Mélynda, Kenny, David, Mathot, Michael, Mauricio, Rogerio M, McClelland, Shelby C, Niu, Mutian, Onyango, Alice Anyango, Parajuli, Ranjan, Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro, del Prado, Agustin, Paz Tieri, Maria, Uwizeye, Aimable, Kebreab, Ermias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9261501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35657151
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/skac197
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author Tedeschi, Luis Orlindo
Abdalla, Adibe Luiz
Álvarez, Clementina
Anuga, Samuel Weniga
Arango, Jacobo
Beauchemin, Karen A
Becquet, Philippe
Berndt, Alexandre
Burns, Robert
De Camillis, Camillo
Chará, Julián
Echazarreta, Javier Martin
Hassouna, Mélynda
Kenny, David
Mathot, Michael
Mauricio, Rogerio M
McClelland, Shelby C
Niu, Mutian
Onyango, Alice Anyango
Parajuli, Ranjan
Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro
del Prado, Agustin
Paz Tieri, Maria
Uwizeye, Aimable
Kebreab, Ermias
author_facet Tedeschi, Luis Orlindo
Abdalla, Adibe Luiz
Álvarez, Clementina
Anuga, Samuel Weniga
Arango, Jacobo
Beauchemin, Karen A
Becquet, Philippe
Berndt, Alexandre
Burns, Robert
De Camillis, Camillo
Chará, Julián
Echazarreta, Javier Martin
Hassouna, Mélynda
Kenny, David
Mathot, Michael
Mauricio, Rogerio M
McClelland, Shelby C
Niu, Mutian
Onyango, Alice Anyango
Parajuli, Ranjan
Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro
del Prado, Agustin
Paz Tieri, Maria
Uwizeye, Aimable
Kebreab, Ermias
author_sort Tedeschi, Luis Orlindo
collection PubMed
description The contribution of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from ruminant production systems varies between countries and between regions within individual countries. The appropriate quantification of GHG emissions, specifically methane (CH(4)), has raised questions about the correct reporting of GHG inventories and, perhaps more importantly, how best to mitigate CH(4) emissions. This review documents existing methods and methodologies to measure and estimate CH(4) emissions from ruminant animals and the manure produced therein over various scales and conditions. Measurements of CH(4) have frequently been conducted in research settings using classical methodologies developed for bioenergetic purposes, such as gas exchange techniques (respiration chambers, headboxes). While very precise, these techniques are limited to research settings as they are expensive, labor-intensive, and applicable only to a few animals. Head-stalls, such as the GreenFeed system, have been used to measure expired CH(4) for individual animals housed alone or in groups in confinement or grazing. This technique requires frequent animal visitation over the diurnal measurement period and an adequate number of collection days. The tracer gas technique can be used to measure CH(4) from individual animals housed outdoors, as there is a need to ensure low background concentrations. Micrometeorological techniques (e.g., open-path lasers) can measure CH(4) emissions over larger areas and many animals, but limitations exist, including the need to measure over more extended periods. Measurement of CH(4) emissions from manure depends on the type of storage, animal housing, CH(4) concentration inside and outside the boundaries of the area of interest, and ventilation rate, which is likely the variable that contributes the greatest to measurement uncertainty. For large-scale areas, aircraft, drones, and satellites have been used in association with the tracer flux method, inverse modeling, imagery, and LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging), but research is lagging in validating these methods. Bottom-up approaches to estimating CH(4) emissions rely on empirical or mechanistic modeling to quantify the contribution of individual sources (enteric and manure). In contrast, top-down approaches estimate the amount of CH(4) in the atmosphere using spatial and temporal models to account for transportation from an emitter to an observation point. While these two estimation approaches rarely agree, they help identify knowledge gaps and research requirements in practice.
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spelling pubmed-92615012022-07-07 Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods Tedeschi, Luis Orlindo Abdalla, Adibe Luiz Álvarez, Clementina Anuga, Samuel Weniga Arango, Jacobo Beauchemin, Karen A Becquet, Philippe Berndt, Alexandre Burns, Robert De Camillis, Camillo Chará, Julián Echazarreta, Javier Martin Hassouna, Mélynda Kenny, David Mathot, Michael Mauricio, Rogerio M McClelland, Shelby C Niu, Mutian Onyango, Alice Anyango Parajuli, Ranjan Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro del Prado, Agustin Paz Tieri, Maria Uwizeye, Aimable Kebreab, Ermias J Anim Sci Environmental Animal Science The contribution of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from ruminant production systems varies between countries and between regions within individual countries. The appropriate quantification of GHG emissions, specifically methane (CH(4)), has raised questions about the correct reporting of GHG inventories and, perhaps more importantly, how best to mitigate CH(4) emissions. This review documents existing methods and methodologies to measure and estimate CH(4) emissions from ruminant animals and the manure produced therein over various scales and conditions. Measurements of CH(4) have frequently been conducted in research settings using classical methodologies developed for bioenergetic purposes, such as gas exchange techniques (respiration chambers, headboxes). While very precise, these techniques are limited to research settings as they are expensive, labor-intensive, and applicable only to a few animals. Head-stalls, such as the GreenFeed system, have been used to measure expired CH(4) for individual animals housed alone or in groups in confinement or grazing. This technique requires frequent animal visitation over the diurnal measurement period and an adequate number of collection days. The tracer gas technique can be used to measure CH(4) from individual animals housed outdoors, as there is a need to ensure low background concentrations. Micrometeorological techniques (e.g., open-path lasers) can measure CH(4) emissions over larger areas and many animals, but limitations exist, including the need to measure over more extended periods. Measurement of CH(4) emissions from manure depends on the type of storage, animal housing, CH(4) concentration inside and outside the boundaries of the area of interest, and ventilation rate, which is likely the variable that contributes the greatest to measurement uncertainty. For large-scale areas, aircraft, drones, and satellites have been used in association with the tracer flux method, inverse modeling, imagery, and LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging), but research is lagging in validating these methods. Bottom-up approaches to estimating CH(4) emissions rely on empirical or mechanistic modeling to quantify the contribution of individual sources (enteric and manure). In contrast, top-down approaches estimate the amount of CH(4) in the atmosphere using spatial and temporal models to account for transportation from an emitter to an observation point. While these two estimation approaches rarely agree, they help identify knowledge gaps and research requirements in practice. Oxford University Press 2022-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9261501/ /pubmed/35657151 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/skac197 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Environmental Animal Science
Tedeschi, Luis Orlindo
Abdalla, Adibe Luiz
Álvarez, Clementina
Anuga, Samuel Weniga
Arango, Jacobo
Beauchemin, Karen A
Becquet, Philippe
Berndt, Alexandre
Burns, Robert
De Camillis, Camillo
Chará, Julián
Echazarreta, Javier Martin
Hassouna, Mélynda
Kenny, David
Mathot, Michael
Mauricio, Rogerio M
McClelland, Shelby C
Niu, Mutian
Onyango, Alice Anyango
Parajuli, Ranjan
Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro
del Prado, Agustin
Paz Tieri, Maria
Uwizeye, Aimable
Kebreab, Ermias
Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
title Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
title_full Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
title_fullStr Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
title_full_unstemmed Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
title_short Quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
title_sort quantification of methane emitted by ruminants: a review of methods
topic Environmental Animal Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9261501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35657151
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/skac197
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