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Sheep from low-methane-yield selection lines created on alfalfa pellets also have lower methane yield under pastoral farming conditions

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-03, 16:07 authored by Arjan JonkerArjan Jonker, Sharon HickeySharon Hickey, John McEwanJohn McEwan, Cesar Pinares-Patino, Stephen Olinga, Alexey Diaz, German MolanoGerman Molano, Sarah Maclean, Edgar Sandoval, Reuben Harland, Derek BirchDerek Birch, Brooke BrysonBrooke Bryson, Kevin Knowler, Suzanne RoweSuzanne Rowe
Selection lines of sheep with low and high CH4 yield (g/kg DMI; CH4/DMI) are being developed on the basis of feeding pelleted alfalfa hay at 2.0 times maintenance ME requirements in respiration chambers, but their divergence under predominant grazing conditions, as in New Zealand, is not known. The objectives of this study were to determine CH4 emissions and rumen fermentation characteristics in sheep from low and high CH4/DMI selection lines while grazing pasture. Two grazing experiments were conducted with 42 selection line ewes in March 2013 (Exp. 1) and 98 selection line progeny ewe hoggets in October/November 2014 (Exp. 2), with CH4 emissions estimated by the SF6 tracer technique and DMI estimated by titanium oxide in combination with natural long-chain n-alkanes. Total daily CH4 production (g/d) was similar between high and low CH4/DMI selection line sheep in Exp. 1 and lower for low CH4/DMI progeny compared with high CH4/DMI progeny in Exp. 2 (P < 0.05). The CH4/DMI tended to be 20% lower for low CH4/DMI line sheep compared with high CH4/DMI selection line sheep in Exp. 1 (P < 0.10) and was 15% lower for the low CH4/DMI line in Exp. 2 (P < 0.01). Total VFA concentration and concentrations (mM) of acetate, butyrate, and isobutyrate plus isovalerate were lower (P < 0.05) for low CH4/DMI line sheep compared with high CH4/DMI selection line sheep in both experiments. The current study indicates that differences in CH4/DMI and VFA concentrations in selection line sheep, previously established on alfalfa pellets, are also present to a similar magnitude when grazing pasture.

History

Rights statement

Copyright © 2019 American Society of Animal Science

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Wiley

Journal title

Journal of Animal Science

ISSN

0021-8812

Citation

Jonker, A., Hickey, S., McEwan, J., Pinares-Patino, C., Olinga, S., Diaz, A., … Rowe, S. (2017). Sheep from low-methane-yield selection lines created on alfalfa pellets also have lower methane yield under pastoral farming conditions. Journal of Animal Science, 95(9), 3905–3913. doi:10.2527/jas.2017.1709

Funder

Pastoral Greenhouse Gas Research Consortium (PGgRc)

Contract number

A20535

Job code

12551X05

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