Tuesday, 21 May 2013 15:00

Messy eating contributes to gas emissions

Written by 

‘LITTER FALL’ – the feed wasted when some of each cow mouthful falls to the ground – is a hitherto little-noticed contributor to nitrous oxide gas emissions to atmosphere. 

 

Watch a cow eating and you will notice always some of each mouthful falls to the ground uneaten; cows are messy eaters. 

 Dr Pranoy Pal and colleagues Tim Clough and Frank Kelliher, Department of Soil and Physical Sciences, Lincoln University, call this ‘litter-fall’.   They made a study of how litter-fall occurred and its effect on nitrous oxide emissions from pastures. Once fallen from a cow’s mouth, plant parts in the litter-fall either stay on the surface after falling or are trodden into the soil during grazing. 

 To obtain samples of the litter-fall and the original pasture, Pal marked out 1m2 (quadrats) randomly through a paddock before and after grazing by cows.  Once the cows were moved to another pasture Pal used a leaf blower-vacuum machine to collect the litter-fall and calculated the rate of litter-fall. This was later analysed in a laboratory.  

“In starting this research, I was relieved to find I was not required to spend days chasing cows around paddocks, trying to hold a bag under each cow in order to collect the litter-fall.”

 Litter-fall rates were found to range from 53-72kgDM/ha in a single grazing event – 4-5% wasteage of the expected total consumption of the animals. 

Subsequent studies on the Lincoln University dairy farm revealed the fate of the litter-fall and how much decomposed to nitrous oxide on the surface after being walked over by the cows when feeding.  

Pal showed that under suitable conditions about 1% of the nitrogen contained in the litter-fall may be transformed to nitrous oxide and emitted to the atmosphere. 

• Janette Busch is a science writer with the Faculty of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Lincoln University

Featured

NZ growers lead freshwater compliance

Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ) says that commercial fruit and vegetable growers are getting ahead of freshwater farm plan regulations through its Growing Change project.

Case IH partners with Meet the Need

Tractor manufacturer and distributor Case IH has announced a new partnership with Meet the Need, the grassroots, farmer-led charity working to tackle food insecurity across New Zealand one meal at a time.

25 years on - where are they now?

To celebrate 25 years of the Hugh Williams Memorial Scholarship, Ravensdown caught up with past recipients to see where their careers have taken them, and what the future holds for the industry.

National

Top ag scientist to advise PM

A highly experienced agricultural scientist with specialist knowledge of the dairy sector is the Prime Minister's new Chief Science Advisor.

Machinery & Products

Hose runner saves time and effort

Rakaia-based equipment manufacturer Pluck’s Engineering will soon start production of a new machine designed to simplify the deployment and retrieval…

» Latest Print Issues Online

Milking It

Science fiction

OPINION: Last week's announcement of Prime Minister’s new Science and Technology Advisory Council hasn’t gone down too well in the…

Bye bye Paris?

OPINION: At its recent annual general meeting, Federated Farmers’ Auckland province called for New Zealand to withdraw from the Paris…

» Connect with Dairy News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter