An increase in dietary lipid content from different forms of double-low rapeseed reduces enteric methane emission in Datong yaks on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.

Anim Sci J

Key Laboratory of Plateau Grazing Animal Nutrition and Feed Science of Qinghai Province, The Academy of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Plateau Ecology and Agriculture, Qinghai University, Xining, China.

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Enteric methane emissions in yaks decrease significantly with higher dietary lipid content, showing a reduction of about 1.75 g/g dry matter intake for every 10 g/kg DM increase.
  • The study utilized four yaks in a Latin-square design with varying forms and lipid amounts of rapeseed to analyze the impact on methane emissions and feed digestibility.
  • Although feed digestibility remained consistent across the different diets, the group consuming the highest lipid content showed the lowest concentrations of ruminal volatile fatty acids and methane production.

Article Abstract

Enteric methane (CH ) emission in cattle generally decreases by approximately 1 g/g dry matter intake (DMI) with an increase in dietary lipids of 10 g/kg dry matter (DM). The effect of dietary lipids on CH emission in yaks has not been reported and is the subject of this study. Four Datong yaks were used in a 4 × 4 Latin-square design in which the four treatments included restricted intakes of double-low rapeseed differing in form and lipid (ether extract-EE) content: (a) rapeseed meal (EE 32.6 g/kg DM); (b) rapeseed meal and rapeseed cake (EE 45.8 g/kg DM); (c) rapeseed meal and whole cracked rapeseed (EE 54.5 g/kg DM) and (d) rapeseed meal and rapeseed oil (EE 62.7 g/kg DM). The digestibility of feed components did not differ among treatments. The ruminal total volatile fatty acids (p = .082) and acetic acid (p = .062) concentrations tended to be lowest in yaks consuming the diet with highest lipid content. In addition, CH production was lowest in this group (p = .004), and declined by 1.75 g/g DMI per 10 g/kg DM reduction in dietary lipid content, a rate substantially faster than in cattle.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/asj.13489DOI Listing

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