Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.

Globally methane (CH4) emissions from ruminant livestock account for 29% of total CH4 emissions. Inherited variation about CH4 emissions of different animal species might provide new opportunity for manipulating CH4 production. Six rumen-simulating fermenters (Rusitec) were set up for this study las...

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Main Authors: Jiandui Mi, Jianwei Zhou, Xiaodan Huang, Ruijun Long
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5226831?pdf=render
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author Jiandui Mi
Jianwei Zhou
Xiaodan Huang
Ruijun Long
author_facet Jiandui Mi
Jianwei Zhou
Xiaodan Huang
Ruijun Long
author_sort Jiandui Mi
collection DOAJ
description Globally methane (CH4) emissions from ruminant livestock account for 29% of total CH4 emissions. Inherited variation about CH4 emissions of different animal species might provide new opportunity for manipulating CH4 production. Six rumen-simulating fermenters (Rusitec) were set up for this study lasting for 16 d. The diet consisted of forage to concentrate ratio of 50:50 with barley straw as the forage. Treated vessels were supplied with rumen fluid from yak or cattle (3 vessels per animal species). Microbial growth was measured using 15N as a marker. The microbial community structure from liquid- and solid-fraction of each vessel was determined based on the 16S rRNA genes targeting both bacteria and archaea with MiSeq platform. CH4 yield was lower when the inoculum used from yak than that from cattle (0.26 and 0.33 mmol CH4/g dry matter intake, respectively). Lower H2 production was observed in Rusitec fermenters with rumen fluid from yak compare with that from cattle (0.28 and 0.86 mmol/d, respectively). The apparent digestibility of neutral detergent fiber, the isovalerate percentage with respect to the total amount of volatile fatty acids, the hydrogen recovery, and the proportion of liquid-associated microbial nitrogen derived from ammonia-nitrogen were higher in Rusitec fermenters incubated with rumen fluid from cattle than that from yak. The relative abundances of methanogens were no difference between two animal species. We hypothesize that more H2 production contributes to the higher methane emissions in cattle compare with yak.
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spelling doaj.art-3d63a8fd095e45a68ae182fb83c9ec5c2022-12-22T01:19:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01121e017004410.1371/journal.pone.0170044Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.Jiandui MiJianwei ZhouXiaodan HuangRuijun LongGlobally methane (CH4) emissions from ruminant livestock account for 29% of total CH4 emissions. Inherited variation about CH4 emissions of different animal species might provide new opportunity for manipulating CH4 production. Six rumen-simulating fermenters (Rusitec) were set up for this study lasting for 16 d. The diet consisted of forage to concentrate ratio of 50:50 with barley straw as the forage. Treated vessels were supplied with rumen fluid from yak or cattle (3 vessels per animal species). Microbial growth was measured using 15N as a marker. The microbial community structure from liquid- and solid-fraction of each vessel was determined based on the 16S rRNA genes targeting both bacteria and archaea with MiSeq platform. CH4 yield was lower when the inoculum used from yak than that from cattle (0.26 and 0.33 mmol CH4/g dry matter intake, respectively). Lower H2 production was observed in Rusitec fermenters with rumen fluid from yak compare with that from cattle (0.28 and 0.86 mmol/d, respectively). The apparent digestibility of neutral detergent fiber, the isovalerate percentage with respect to the total amount of volatile fatty acids, the hydrogen recovery, and the proportion of liquid-associated microbial nitrogen derived from ammonia-nitrogen were higher in Rusitec fermenters incubated with rumen fluid from cattle than that from yak. The relative abundances of methanogens were no difference between two animal species. We hypothesize that more H2 production contributes to the higher methane emissions in cattle compare with yak.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5226831?pdf=render
spellingShingle Jiandui Mi
Jianwei Zhou
Xiaodan Huang
Ruijun Long
Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.
PLoS ONE
title Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.
title_full Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.
title_fullStr Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.
title_full_unstemmed Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.
title_short Lower Methane Emissions from Yak Compared with Cattle in Rusitec Fermenters.
title_sort lower methane emissions from yak compared with cattle in rusitec fermenters
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5226831?pdf=render
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AT jianweizhou lowermethaneemissionsfromyakcomparedwithcattleinrusitecfermenters
AT xiaodanhuang lowermethaneemissionsfromyakcomparedwithcattleinrusitecfermenters
AT ruijunlong lowermethaneemissionsfromyakcomparedwithcattleinrusitecfermenters