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Tropical cattle methane emissions : the role of natural statins supplementation

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by C Ramirez-Restrepo, Christopher O'Neill, N López-Villalobos, J Padmanabha, C McSweeney
A natural food-based supplementation in the basal diet (BD) of cattle for lowering methane emissions was conducted over a 2.5-month period in 2013 at Lansdown Research Station, in north Queensland, Australia. Using eight rumen-cannulated Belmont Red Composite steers [436 ± 18.2 kg liveweight (LW); least squares means ± s.e.m.] fed a diet mixture of 0.85 CSIRO’s Ridley beef finisher pellets and 0.15 Rhodes grass (Chloris gayana); Experiment 1 compared for7 weeks dose-dependent effects of the fermented-Monascus purpureus red rice powder (FRR) on dry matter intake (DMI), feed efficiency and tolerability. Consistent with the developed feeding methodology, the second experiment used four(461 ± 18.2 kg LW) fistulated Belmont Red Composite steers to assess rumen fermentation parameters and methane emissions measured in an open-circuit respiratory chamber system over ~4 weeks. Overall, LW increased throughout the study. In Experiment 1, the supplementation of FRR containing a natural lovastatin (monakolin K) reached 120 g/day(i.e. 2.88 ± 0.057mg monakolin K/kgLW)fed in two approximately equal portions at 0900 hours and 1600 hours. However, once the diet was equal to or higher than 110 g/day of FRR, adverse effects were evident in terms of DMI (P < 0.05) andanimal physiology. Compared with the BD, dietary intake of 40 g of FRR/day (i.e. 0.92 ± 0.034 mg monakolin K/kg LW)was associated (P < 0.05) with increased DMI and reduced methane yield (g/kg DMI) emissions. However, the effectwas transient and not observed as FRR increased to 100 g/day. It was concluded that the adverse effects of FRR on animal health precludes further investigation with high doses of supplementation, and the transient reduction in methane yield was probably due to rumen adaptation.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

54

Issue

9

Start Page

1294

End Page

1299

Number of Pages

6

eISSN

1836-5787

ISSN

1836-0939

Location

Clayton South, Victoria

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

CSIRO Sustainable Agriculture Flagship; Massey University; Not affiliated to a Research Institute;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Animal production science.

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