Currently, various attempts are being made to implement breeding schemes aimed at producing low methane (CH 4 ) emitting cows. We investigated the persistence of differences in CH 4 emission between groups of cows categorized as either low or high emitters over a 5-mo period. Two feeding regimens (pasture vs. indoors) were used. Early-to mid-lactation Holstein Friesian cows were categorized as low or high emitters (n = 10 each) retrospectively, using predictions from milk mid-infrared (MIR) spectra, before the start of the experiment. Data from MIR estimates and from measurements with the GreenFeed (GF; C-Lock Technology Inc., Rapid City, SD) system over the 5-mo experiment were combined into 7-, 14-, and 28-d periods. Feed intake, eating and ruminating behavior, and ruminal fluid traits were determined in two 7-d measurement periods in the grazing season. The CH 4 emission data were analyzed using a split-plot ANOVA, and the repeatability of each of the applied methods for determining CH 4 emission was calculated. Traits other than CH 4 emission were analyzed for differences between low and high emitters using a linear mixed model. The initial category-dependent differences in daily CH 4 production persisted over the subsequent 5 mo and across 2 feeding regimens with both methods. The repeatability analysis indicated that the biweekly milk control scheme, and even a monthly scheme as practiced on farms, might be sufficient for confirming category differences. However, the relationship between CH 4 data estimated by MIR and measured with GF for individual cows was weak (R 2 = 0.26). The categorization based on CH 4 production also generated differences in CH 4 emission per kilogram of milk; differentiation between cow categories was not persistent based on milk MIR spectra and GF. Compared with the high emitters, low emitters tended to show a lower acetate-to-propionate ratio in ruminal volatile fatty acids, whereas feed intake and ruminating time did not differ. Interestingly, the low emitters spent less time eating than the high emitters. In conclusion, the CH 4 estimation from analyzing the milk MIR spectra is an appropriate proxy to form and regularly control categories of cows with different CH 4 production levels. The categorization was also sufficient to secure similar and persistent differences in emission intensity when estimated by MIR spectra of the milk. Further studies are needed to determine whether MIR data from individual cows are sufficiently accurate for breeding.
Characteristics of low methane emitting cows as categorized by midinfrared spectra and respiration chamber measurements. Denninger et al. Mid-infrared spectra (MIR) were used to identify low and high methane emitting dairy cows within the Swiss, Brown Swiss population. Thirty individuals were selected for methane measurements using respiration chambers and laser methane detectors. The MIR predictions were fairly persistent across different environments and differently developed equations. However, correlations with methane measurements were too weak to use MIR as a tool to select low emitting cows. Cows categorized as low emitters by respiration chamber data expressed distinct characteristics in digestion and efficiency.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.