Caitríona Morrissey reports on how scientists and regulators were shocked by the recent backlash against methane-reducing feed additive Bovaer.
Australian scientists have found a natural feed additive that can significantly slash livestock methane emissions and offers ...
A new study led by Prof. Tan Zhiliang from the Institute of Subtropical Agriculture of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has ...
Nine new projects have received a collective $1.43 million in funding through the Beef Cattle Research Council’s next call ...
A research team led by Prof. Tan Zhiliang from the Institute of Subtropical Agriculture of the Chinese Academy of Sciences ...
A research team led by Prof. TAN Zhiliang from the Institute of Subtropical Agriculture of the Chinese Academy of Sciences ...
You can feed it, like an actual cow, and it will show the different cultures inside as well as how the cow will be absorbing the nutrition.
But with an imbalance, there are some other ‘bugs’ that use up the left-over carbon molecules, and turn them into methane, so that the waste can be belched out. So, in an ideal world, the rumen might ...
During digestion, grass ferments in the rumen—a specialized compartment in the cow’s stomach—leading to the production of methane, a greenhouse gas 28 times more potent than carbon dioxide, though it ...
As grass ferments in the rumen — one of four compartments in the animal’s stomach — it naturally produces methane, a greenhouse gas 28 times more potent than CO2, although shorter lived in the ...
As grass ferments in the rumen — one of four compartments in the animal’s stomach — it naturally produces methane, a greenhouse gas 28 times more potent than CO2, although shorter lived in ...