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Research article2015Peer reviewedOpen access

Comparison of methods to determine methane emissions from dairy cows in farm conditions

Huhtanen, Pekka; Hernando Cabezas Garcia, Edward; Utsumi, S.; Zimmerman, S.

Abstract

Nutritional and animal-selection strategies to mitigate enteric methane (CH4) depend on accurate, cost-effective methods to determine emissions from a large number of animals. The objective of the present study was to compare 2 spot-sampling methods to determine CH4emissions from dairy cows, using gas quantification equipment installed in concentrate feeders or automatic milking stalls. In the first method (sniffer method), CH4and carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations were measured in close proximity to the muzzle of the animal, and average CH4concentrations or CH4/CO2ratio was calculated. In the second method (flux method), measurement of CH4and CO2concentration was combined with an active airflow inside the feed troughs for capture of emitted gas and measurements of CH4and CO2fluxes. A muzzle sensor was used allowing data to be filtered when the muzzle was not near the sampling inlet. In a laboratory study, a model cow head was built that emitted CO2at a constant rate. It was found that CO2concentrations using the sniffer method decreased up to 39% when the distance of the muzzle from the sampling inlet increased to 30 cm, but no muzzle-position effects were observed for the flux method. The methods were compared in 2 on-farm studies conducted using 32 (experiment 1) or 59 (experiment 2) cows in a switch-back design of 5 (experiment 1) or 4 (experiment 2) periods for replicated comparisons between methods. Between-cow coefficient of variation (CV) in CH4was smaller for the flux than the sniffer method (experiment 1, CV = 11.0 vs. 17.5%, and experiment 2, 17.6 vs. 28.0%). Repeatability of the measurements from both methods were high (0.72–0.88), but the relationship between the sniffer and flux methods was weak (R2= 0.09 in both experiments). With the flux method CH4was found to be correlated to dry matter intake or body weight, but this was not the case with the sniffer method. The CH4/CO2ratio was more highly correlated between the flux and sniffer methods (R2= 0.30), and CV was similar (6.4–8.8%). In experiment 2, cow muzzle position was highly repeatable (0.82) and influenced sniffer and flux method results when not filtered for muzzle position. It was concluded that the flux method provides more reliable estimates of CH4emissions than the sniffer method. The sniffer method appears to be affected by variable air-mixing conditions created by geometry of feed trough, muzzle movement, and muzzle position.

Keywords

concentration; dairy cow; flux; methane

Published in

Journal of Dairy Science
2015, Volume: 98, number: 5, pages: 3394-3409

      SLU Authors

    • Huhtanen, Pekka

      • Department of Agricultural Research for Northern Sweden, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
      • Hernando Cabezas Garcia, Edward

        • Department of Agricultural Research for Northern Sweden, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

      Associated SLU-program

      Future Agriculture (until Jan 2017)
      Future Animal Health and Welfare (until Jan 2017)

      UKÄ Subject classification

      Animal and Dairy Science

      Publication identifier

      DOI: https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2014-9118

      Permanent link to this page (URI)

      https://res.slu.se/id/publ/66703