Ruminant feed with orange leaves may reduce methane emissions
Use of fruit and vegetable residues also reduces burning of byproducts in field.
Diet containing rice straw and citrus pruning reduces animal-generated methane emissions by 8% to 22%
Rice straw and citrus pruning remains may now have a new use as a ruminant feed after a team of researchers from the Universitat Politácnica de Valencia (UPV) in Spain developed ruminant diets from these fruit and vegetable wastes, according to a translated announcement.
Among its advantages, the use of new feed would help reduce the burning of these byproducts in the field as well as reduce the emissions of methane generated by animals, the researchers said.
The work is part of the European "Low Carbon Feed Project" (LIFE16/CCM/ES/000088). The initial results were published in the journal Animal Feed Science & Technology.
"In recent years, rice straw has been eliminated by controlled burning of crops. On the other hand, pruning remains of citrus crops – orange and lemon trees – are also removed by burning or crushing in green. All these practices cause large greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere," said Carlos Fernández, researcher at the UPV Institute of Animal Science & Technology responsible for the project at UPV.
The feed designed by UPV researchers reduced methane emissions by 8-22%, the announcement said. In addition to the residues of rice straw and citrus leaves, the feeds also incorporated other ingredients that guarantee that all of the animals' nutritional needs are met. Furthermore, the researchers noted that the feeds are useful because they revalue a byproduct.
"The 'Low Carbon Feed' diets have incorporated rice straw and orange and lemon leaf residues into the compound feed of ruminant animals. That is, these residues have not been used as a forage source but have been introduced as one more ingredient in the production of a compound feed," Fernández said.
The feed can be used for any population of ruminant animals (beef, sheep, goats, cebu, water buffalo, yaks, cervids, etc.) and even herbivores such as the family of camelids (dromedaries, camels, flame, alpacas, vicuña, etc.), UPV said.
"It is also a proposal that complies with one of the principles of a sustainable agricultural livestock system, the 3Rs — reuse, recycle and reduce — without harming or altering the production level of animals," Fernández said.
In addition to Fernández, the UPV team also included Tamara Romero, Pilar Molina and Nemesio Fernández from the Institute of Animal Science & Technology and José Vicente Martí, José Luis Palomares and Ion Pérez-Baena from the department of animal science.
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