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Methane from Livestock (merged)

Re: Methane from Livestock (merged)

Unread postby Tanada » Sat 12 Mar 2016, 23:42:21

Speaking of livestock methane, this news just popped up today after I said there was no news.

Cattle have bad breath and commonly suffer from severe, chronic flatus generating large amounts of methane, which is a greenhouse gas and a driver of anthropogenic global warming.

The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the agricultural sector account for about 25.5% of total global anthropogenic emission. Methane is one of the most important GHGs and it has 21 times more global warming potential than carbon dioxide. Ruminant livestock contributes the major proportion of total agricultural emission of methane. There is an obvious answer to this problem, stop breeding cattle.

Unfortunately a large proportion of us enjoy our bovine dairy products and meat too much. Until synthetic products that are indistinguishable from the real thing become available and accepted by milk drinkers and steak fans, we will have to look into alternative approaches to reducing the carbon emissions from these creatures.

Writing in International Journal of Global Warming, Abdelmajid Moumen, Ghizlane Azizi, Kaoutar Ben Chekroun and Mourad Baghour of the Université Mohamed 1er, in Nador, Morocco, have reviewed the various approaches to reducing methane emissions from cattle and other livestock. These approaches involve improved genetic selection through breeding, modification of dietary composition, or through rumen microbial manipulation, vaccines against the methanogenic bacteria that generate the methane in these animals and various other techniques. It is possible that among the approaches or with a combination of approaches there might be a way to reduce the global burden of methane emissions from livestock.

“Methane emissions by livestock are very significant contributors to anthropogenic emissions of GHGs in many countries and the onus is increasingly on the farming industry to find ways of reducing these emissions,” the researchers say.

They point out that while changes in nutrition and feed can play an important role on methane production by ruminants, manipulating the diet of these animals to reduce absolute methane emissions is a big challenge both practically and financially. However, inhibitors of the methanogenic bacteria have been demonstrated, although more detailed studies are needed urgently to demonstrate efficacy and to ensure that latent side effects might not be more deleterious to the environment, animal welfare and human health.

Fundamentally, however, the pressure to reduce the carbon footprint of livestock using any of these approaches will have to compete with the need for economic viability of the farming industry, at least until synthetic meat usurps the T-bone steak or the carnivores among us go vegetarian.


https://biotechin.asia/2016/03/12/cutti ... latulence/
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Re: Methane from Livestock (merged)

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Sun 13 Mar 2016, 12:07:15

Not to diminish the fossil fuel consumption's component of CC. But I've unsuccessfully search for the volume of GHG produced BH not just animal digestion but also breathing by mankind. Granted a person's releases a totally insignifinat amount compared to a coal powered power plant. OTOH there arer billions exhaling. And then there are unintentional natural fired and intentional at fires. The Rockman once had to pull of the road in S LA because the smokie from the burning sugar cane fields was so bad.

So while one can't argue that AGW isn't effecting the climate have we really come up with a questimate of what each component (inc!uding non-human sources) contributes? Addressing one obvious source, fossil fuel consumption, might be missing other significant sources.
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