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Source: https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/plan-to-breed-cows-that-produce-more-milk-and-burp-less-methane-37747518.html
Methane
is burped out by cows, and can stay in the atmosphere for 12 years and is a
factor in climate change. Farming accounts for 85pc of all methane gas
emissions in Ireland.
Grass
is used to feed most of the dairy herd in Ireland - but cows can't digest it
without the help of microbes in their stomach called methanogens.
Methanogens
break down the grass - but also produce methane which is burped out by the
animal.
Ground-breaking
research could give dairy farmers new tools to breed cows that produce more milk,
but reduce their methane emissions.
Teagasc's
Dr Sinead McParland has recently received €375,000 from the Science Foundation
Ireland, under their Starting Investigator Research Grant. She will use this
funding to try to identify the most efficient and profitable cows in the
national herd.
It's
not envisaged Dr McParland's research will mean the end of belching for Irish
cows, but it might lead to a way in which the belching emits lower levels of
methane.
Dr
McParland's research will try to identify cows, through their milk, that
produce lower levels of methane yet higher levels of milk.
"The
most efficient, environmentally sustainable cow produces the greatest volume of
milk, from the lowest dietary intake," she said.
Dr
McParland says "efficient" cows are required to help meet the global dairy
shortfall, but the amount of research available to date is very limited.
"The
research will address the seismic challenge we face to breed more efficient
animals (producing more milk from less input) with a lower environmental
hoof-print."
McParland
said the current tools which evaluate the efficiency of cows are very laborious
and expensive to operate.
This
research, she says, will allow a greater amount of information to be collected
at farm level which will give a wide representation of the national herd.
As
part of this research, milk samples will be analysed by shining a light through
the sample at over 1,000 wavelengths which can determine the fat and protein
content of the milk as it can also predict the energy intake of cows as well as
methane emissions.
"We
aim to build on this initial research to build the most accurate equations in
order to capture this data from all milk recorded animals and feed this data
into the national genetic evaluations.
"Farmers
involved in routine milk recording will have this data recorded on their
individual animals, enabling them to identify their most efficient,
lowest-emitting animals.
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