Author:
MURRAY P. J.,MOSS A.,LOCKYER D. R.,JARVIS S. C.
Abstract
Two experiments were conducted, at ADAS Drayton in the autumn and winter 1996/1997, to
compare methane (CH4) emissions from sheep housed either in a polytunnel system or in open-circuit
respiration chambers. In each system, the sheep received maintenance levels of either cut grass or high
temperature dried grass pellets (HTDG). All experiments in the tunnel were conducted on concrete
to avoid any interactions of the CH4 with the soil/plant environment. The results suggested that CH4
production from the open-circuit chambers was greater than from the tunnel system (26·9±0·46 v.
31·7±0·35 l/kg dry matter intake (±S.E.) for open circuit respiration chambers and tunnel,
respectively). Recovery tests gave similar results for both systems (95·5–97·9% for tunnels and
89·2–96·7% for chambers), and confirmed that both methods give good quantitative recovery of
added CH4, and can therefore be assumed to provide reliable estimates of emissions from animals.
There is no technical explanation, therefore, for the different estimates of emissions provided by the
two systems. Further studies are required to understand the reasons for the differences and in
particular, the possible links between animal behaviour induced by the two systems and CH4 emission
rates.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
34 articles.
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