4.6 Article

Addition of Activated Carbon into a Cattle Diet to Mitigate GHG Emissions and Improve Production

期刊

SUSTAINABILITY
卷 13, 期 15, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13158254

关键词

greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions; methane (CH4); powdered activated carbon (PAC); ruminants

资金

  1. republic of Iraq ministry of higher education and scientific research
  2. Australian Commonwealth Government through the Research Training Program (RTP) Fund

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In a study conducted with dairy cattle in Australia, the addition of 0.5% powdered activated carbon significantly reduced methane emissions from ruminants and improved milk production, milk protein, and milk fat content. This highlights the potential of using PAC in ruminant diets to mitigate emissions and enhance productivity.
Globally, the most problematic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of ruminant livestock is methane (CH4), with a global warming potential 25 times that of carbon dioxide. This work considers the emissions and production effects of powdered activated carbon (PAC) at 0.5% by dry matter (DM) on methanogenic rumen flora as the major source of dairy cattle enteric methane emissions. In total, 180 dairy cattle located in Brymaroo, Queensland (QLD), Australia, were studied in a three-cycle repeated measures ANOVA format with a 4 week primary interval. Emissions eructated during milking and in faecal deposits were measured, and in addition, 16S rRNA gene sequencing was performed to determine the collective populations of prokaryotic bacteria and archaea as well methanogenic communities for each treatment. Moreover, 0.5% PAC addition reduced CH4 emissions by 30-40% and CO2 emissions by 10%, while improving daily milk production by 3.43%, milk protein by 2.63% and milk fat by 6.32%, on average for the herd (p < 0.001 in all cases). rRNA gene sequencing showed populations of methanogenic flora decreased by 30% on average with a corresponding increase in the nonmethanogenic species. We strongly advocate further on-farm trials with the dietary addition of PAC in ruminant diets to mitigate emissions while maintaining or improving productivity.

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