Early life dietary intervention in dairy calves results in a long-term reduction in methane emissions

被引:0
|
作者
S. J. Meale
M. Popova
C. Saro
C. Martin
A. Bernard
M. Lagree
D. R. Yáñez-Ruiz
H. Boudra
S. Duval
D. P. Morgavi
机构
[1] Université Clermont Auvergne,INRAE, UMR Herbivores, VetAgro Sup
[2] The University of Queensland,School of Agriculture and Food Sciences
[3] Universidad de León,Departamento de Producción Animal
[4] Université Clermont Auvergne,Plateforme d’Exploration du Métabolisme, MetaboHUB Clermont
[5] Estación Experimental del Zaidín (CSIC),Research Centre for Animal Nutrition and Health
[6] DSM Nutritional Products,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent evidence suggests that changes in microbial colonization of the rumen prior to weaning may imprint the rumen microbiome and impact phenotypes later in life. We investigated how dietary manipulation from birth influences growth, methane production, and gastrointestinal microbial ecology. At birth, 18 female Holstein and Montbéliarde calves were randomly assigned to either treatment or control (CONT). Treatment was 3-nitrooxypropanol (3-NOP), an investigational anti-methanogenic compound that was administered daily from birth until three weeks post-weaning (week 14). Samples of rumen fluid and faecal content were collected at weeks 1, 4, 11, 14, 23, and 60 of life. Calves were tested for methane emissions using the GreenFeed system during the post-weaning period (week 11–23 and week 56–60 of life). Calf physiological parameters (BW, ADG and individual VFA) were similar across groups throughout the trial. Treated calves showed a persistent reduction in methane emissions (g CH4/d) throughout the post-weaning period up to at least 1 year of life, despite treatment ceasing three weeks post-weaning. Similarly, despite variability in the abundance of individual taxa across weeks, the rumen bacterial, archaeal and fungal structure differed between CONT and 3-NOP calves across all weeks, as visualised using sparse-PLS-DA. Similar separation was also observed in the faecal bacterial community. Interestingly, despite modest modifications to the abundance of rumen microbes, the reductive effect of 3-NOP on methane production persisted following cessation of the treatment period, perhaps indicating a differentiation of the ruminal microbial ecosystem or a host response triggered by the treatment in the early development phase.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Early life dietary intervention in dairy calves results in a long-term reduction in methane emissions
    Meale, S. J.
    Popova, M.
    Saro, C.
    Martin, C.
    Bernard, A.
    Lagree, M.
    Yanez-Ruiz, D. R.
    Boudra, H.
    Duval, S.
    Morgavi, D. P.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
  • [2] Long-term effects of early-life rumen microbiota modulation on dairy cow production performance and methane emissions
    Huuki, Hanna
    Tapio, Miika
    Mantysaari, Paivi
    Negussie, Enyew
    Ahvenjarvi, Seppo
    Vilkki, Johanna
    Vanhatalo, Aila
    Tapio, Ilma
    FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [3] Early and long-term results of lung volume reduction in patients with emphysema
    Chihara, K
    Nakajima, D
    Yamashina, A
    Nakai, M
    Sahara, H
    Tsuda, T
    Kono, T
    Osumi, A
    Aoyama, A
    Chen, F
    Isowa, N
    Iwakiri, S
    CHEST, 2005, 128 (04) : 311S - 311S
  • [4] Supplementation with whole cottonseed causes long-term reduction of methane emissions from lactating dairy cows offered a forage and cereal grain diet
    Grainger, C.
    Williams, R.
    Clarke, T.
    Wright, A. -D. G.
    Eckard, R. J.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2010, 93 (06) : 2612 - 2619
  • [5] Diet Influences Early Microbiota Development in Dairy Calves without Long-Term Impacts on Milk Production
    Dill-McFarland, Kimberly A.
    Weimer, Paul J.
    Breaker, Jacob D.
    Suen, Garret
    APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2019, 85 (02)
  • [6] Dietary essential fatty acids in early postnatal life: Long-term outcomes
    Uauy, R
    Rojas, C
    Llanos, AF
    Mena, P
    IMPACT OF MATERNAL NUTRITION ON THE OFFSPRING, 2005, 55 : 101 - 136
  • [7] Long-term effects of feeding gossypol and vitamin E to dairy calves
    Velasquez-Pereira, J
    Risco, CA
    McDowell, LR
    Staples, CR
    Prichard, D
    Chenoweth, PJ
    Martin, FG
    Williams, SN
    Rojas, LX
    Calhoun, MC
    Wilkinson, NS
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 1999, 82 (06) : 1240 - 1251
  • [8] Long-term effects of feeding a mixture of essential oils on methane emissions and milking performance of dairy cows.
    Bach, A.
    Elcoso, G.
    Escartin, M.
    Spengler, K.
    Jouve, A.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2022, 105 : 316 - 317
  • [9] EARLY AND LONG-TERM RESULTS OF GASTRECTOMY
    MUSULMANBEKOV, KZ
    TURGUNOV, MB
    SIROTA, VB
    KLINICHESKAYA MEDITSINA, 1987, 65 (05): : 108 - 111
  • [10] Long-term outcomes of early reading intervention
    Hurry, Jane
    Sylva, Kathy
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN READING, 2007, 30 (03) : 227 - 248