Gas Emissions from Dairy Cows Fed Typical Diets of Midwest, South, and West Regions of the United States
Autor: | Jill Davidson, Bradley Oldick, Wendy Powers, Zifei Liu, Deanne Meyer |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Greenhouse Effect
Environmental Engineering Nitrogen Management Monitoring Policy and Law Excretion chemistry.chemical_compound Ammonia Animal science Milk yield Lactation medicine Animals Dry matter Waste Management and Disposal Water Science and Technology Chemistry Gas emissions Nitrous oxide Carbon Dioxide Animal Feed Pollution United States Diet Manure Milk medicine.anatomical_structure Urea Cattle Female Methane Environmental Monitoring |
Zdroj: | Journal of Environmental Quality. 41:1228-1237 |
ISSN: | 1537-2537 0047-2425 |
DOI: | 10.2134/jeq2011.0435 |
Popis: | Gas emissions were determined for dairy cows fed three diets formulated to represent feed ingredients typical of the Midwest, South, or West regions of the United States. Dairy cows were housed and monitored in 12 environmentally controlled rooms (4 cows diet). Two experiments were performed, representing two lactation stages (initial days in milk were 115 ± 39 d in Stage 1 and 216 ± 48 d in Stage 2). The results demonstrated that the combination of different dietary ingredients resulted in different gas emissions while maintaining similar dry matter intake (DMI) and milk yield (MY). Diet effect on ammonia (NH) emissions was more prominent in Stage 1. During Stage 1, cows fed the Midwest diet had the highest daily NH emission, corresponding to the highest crude protein (CP) concentration among the three regions. The differences in NH emissions (39.0%) were much larger than the percent difference in CP concentrations between diets (6.8%). Differences in N intake, N excretion, or milk urea N alone may not serve as a strong indicator of the potential to reduce NH emissions. Lower emissions of methane (CH) per unit DMI or per unit MY were observed for cows offered the South diet during Stage 1 as compared with that from cows offered the Midwest or West diets. No diet effect was observed for hydrogen sulfide (HS) emission per unit S intake, nor for nitrous oxide (NO) emission. The measured NH and CH emissions were comparable, but the NO emissions were much higher than those reported for tie-stall dairy barns in the literature. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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