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Review: Fifty years of research on rumen methanogenesis: lessons learned and future challenges for mitigation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2020

K. A. Beauchemin*
Affiliation:
Lethbridge Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 5403 1st Avenue South, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, T1J 4B1
E. M. Ungerfeld
Affiliation:
Instituto de Investigaciones Agropecuarias INIA, Camino Cajón a Vilcún s/n km 10, Temuco, Chile
R. J. Eckard
Affiliation:
Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC3010, Australia
M. Wang
Affiliation:
CAS Key Laboratory for Agro-Ecological Processes in Subtropical Region, National Engineering Laboratory for Pollution Control and Waste Utilization in Livestock and Poultry Production, Institute of Subtropical Agriculture, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changsha, Hunan410125, P. R. China

Abstract

Meat and milk from ruminants provide an important source of protein and other nutrients for human consumption. Although ruminants have a unique advantage of being able to consume forages and graze lands not suitable for arable cropping, 2% to 12% of the gross energy consumed is converted to enteric CH4 during ruminal digestion, which contributes approximately 6% of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. Thus, ruminant producers need to find cost-effective ways to reduce emissions while meeting consumer demand for food. This paper provides a critical review of the substantial amount of ruminant CH4-related research published in past decades, highlighting hydrogen flow in the rumen, the microbiome associated with methanogenesis, current and future prospects for CH4 mitigation and insights into future challenges for science, governments, farmers and associated industries. Methane emission intensity, measured as emissions per unit of meat and milk, has continuously declined over the past decades due to improvements in production efficiency and animal performance, and this trend is expected to continue. However, continued decline in emission intensity will likely be insufficient to offset the rising emissions from increasing demand for animal protein. Thus, decreases in both emission intensity (g CH4/animal product) and absolute emissions (g CH4/day) are needed if the ruminant industries continue to grow. Providing producers with cost-effective options for decreasing CH4 emissions is therefore imperative, yet few cost-effective approaches are currently available. Future abatement may be achieved through animal genetics, vaccine development, early life programming, diet formulation, use of alternative hydrogen sinks, chemical inhibitors and fermentation modifiers. Individually, these strategies are expected to have moderate effects (<20% decrease), with the exception of the experimental inhibitor 3-nitrooxypropanol for which decreases in CH4 have consistently been greater (20% to 40% decrease). Therefore, it will be necessary to combine strategies to attain the sizable reduction in CH4 needed, but further research is required to determine whether combining anti-methanogenic strategies will have consistent additive effects. It is also not clear whether a decrease in CH4 production leads to consistent improved animal performance, information that will be necessary for adoption by producers. Major constraints for decreasing global enteric CH4 emissions from ruminants are continued expansion of the industry, the cost of mitigation, the difficulty of applying mitigation strategies to grazing ruminants, the inconsistent effects on animal performance and the paucity of information on animal health, reproduction, product quality, cost-benefit, safety and consumer acceptance.

Information

Type
Review Article
Copyright
© Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, as represented by the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada 2020
Figure 0

Figure 1 Number of published papers related to enteric methanogenesis (Scopus search keywords: methane OR methanogenesis AND cow OR cattle OR sheep OR lamb OR rumen (total = 5845). A shift in research focus from energy metabolism to environment occurred in the early 2000s, indicating significant recent investment in CH4 mitigation research.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Scheme of the major pathways of rumen fermentation including generation and incorporation of metabolic hydrogen ([H]) and dihydrogen (H2). Estimated Gibbs energy changes are based on Kohn and Boston (2000) and Ungerfeld and Kohn (2006) without considering ATP generation. Generation and incorporation of [H] are estimated based on 1 mol of glucose fermentation according to the following reactions: C6H12O6 (glucose)→2 C3H4O3 (pyruvate)+ 2 [2H]; 2 C3H4O3 + 2 HSCoA (non-esterified coenzyme A) → 2 C2H3OSCoA (acetyl coenzyme A) + 2 CO2 + 4 [2H]; C2H3OSCoA + H2O (water) →→ C2H4O2 (acetate) + HSCoA; 2 C2H3OSCoA + 2 [2H] → C4H8O2 (butyrate) + 2 HSCoA; 2 C3H4O3 + 2 [2H] → 2 C3H6O3 (lactate); 2 C3H6O3 + 2 [2H] → 2 C3H6O2 (propionate) + 2 H2O; 2 C3H4O3 + 2 [2H] + 2 CO2 (carbon dioxide) → 2 C4H6O5 (malate); 2 C4H4O4 (fumarate) + 2 [2H] →→ 2 C3H6O2 + 2 CO2.

Figure 2

Table 1 Assessment of select strategies for enteric methane mitigation in the short or medium term based on the information provided in the text