Methane emission by camelids.

Methane emissions from ruminant livestock have been intensively studied in order to reduce contribution to the greenhouse effect. Ruminants were found to produce more enteric methane than other mammalian herbivores. As camelids share some features of their digestive anatomy and physiology with rumin...

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Main Authors: Marie T Dittmann, Ullrich Runge, Richard A Lang, Dario Moser, Cordula Galeffi, Michael Kreuzer, Marcus Clauss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3981797?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7aa522cc210249779b2609819b027d472020-11-25T00:07:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0194e9436310.1371/journal.pone.0094363Methane emission by camelids.Marie T DittmannUllrich RungeRichard A LangDario MoserCordula GaleffiMichael KreuzerMarcus ClaussMethane emissions from ruminant livestock have been intensively studied in order to reduce contribution to the greenhouse effect. Ruminants were found to produce more enteric methane than other mammalian herbivores. As camelids share some features of their digestive anatomy and physiology with ruminants, it has been proposed that they produce similar amounts of methane per unit of body mass. This is of special relevance for countrywide greenhouse gas budgets of countries that harbor large populations of camelids like Australia. However, hardly any quantitative methane emission measurements have been performed in camelids. In order to fill this gap, we carried out respiration chamber measurements with three camelid species (Vicugna pacos, Lama glama, Camelus bactrianus; n = 16 in total), all kept on a diet consisting of food produced from alfalfa only. The camelids produced less methane expressed on the basis of body mass (0.32±0.11 L kg⁻¹ d⁻¹) when compared to literature data on domestic ruminants fed on roughage diets (0.58±0.16 L kg⁻¹ d⁻¹). However, there was no significant difference between the two suborders when methane emission was expressed on the basis of digestible neutral detergent fiber intake (92.7±33.9 L kg⁻¹ in camelids vs. 86.2±12.1 L kg⁻¹ in ruminants). This implies that the pathways of methanogenesis forming part of the microbial digestion of fiber in the foregut are similar between the groups, and that the lower methane emission of camelids can be explained by their generally lower relative food intake. Our results suggest that the methane emission of Australia's feral camels corresponds only to 1 to 2% of the methane amount produced by the countries' domestic ruminants and that calculations of greenhouse gas budgets of countries with large camelid populations based on equations developed for ruminants are generally overestimating the actual levels.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3981797?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie T Dittmann
Ullrich Runge
Richard A Lang
Dario Moser
Cordula Galeffi
Michael Kreuzer
Marcus Clauss
spellingShingle Marie T Dittmann
Ullrich Runge
Richard A Lang
Dario Moser
Cordula Galeffi
Michael Kreuzer
Marcus Clauss
Methane emission by camelids.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Marie T Dittmann
Ullrich Runge
Richard A Lang
Dario Moser
Cordula Galeffi
Michael Kreuzer
Marcus Clauss
author_sort Marie T Dittmann
title Methane emission by camelids.
title_short Methane emission by camelids.
title_full Methane emission by camelids.
title_fullStr Methane emission by camelids.
title_full_unstemmed Methane emission by camelids.
title_sort methane emission by camelids.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Methane emissions from ruminant livestock have been intensively studied in order to reduce contribution to the greenhouse effect. Ruminants were found to produce more enteric methane than other mammalian herbivores. As camelids share some features of their digestive anatomy and physiology with ruminants, it has been proposed that they produce similar amounts of methane per unit of body mass. This is of special relevance for countrywide greenhouse gas budgets of countries that harbor large populations of camelids like Australia. However, hardly any quantitative methane emission measurements have been performed in camelids. In order to fill this gap, we carried out respiration chamber measurements with three camelid species (Vicugna pacos, Lama glama, Camelus bactrianus; n = 16 in total), all kept on a diet consisting of food produced from alfalfa only. The camelids produced less methane expressed on the basis of body mass (0.32±0.11 L kg⁻¹ d⁻¹) when compared to literature data on domestic ruminants fed on roughage diets (0.58±0.16 L kg⁻¹ d⁻¹). However, there was no significant difference between the two suborders when methane emission was expressed on the basis of digestible neutral detergent fiber intake (92.7±33.9 L kg⁻¹ in camelids vs. 86.2±12.1 L kg⁻¹ in ruminants). This implies that the pathways of methanogenesis forming part of the microbial digestion of fiber in the foregut are similar between the groups, and that the lower methane emission of camelids can be explained by their generally lower relative food intake. Our results suggest that the methane emission of Australia's feral camels corresponds only to 1 to 2% of the methane amount produced by the countries' domestic ruminants and that calculations of greenhouse gas budgets of countries with large camelid populations based on equations developed for ruminants are generally overestimating the actual levels.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3981797?pdf=render
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