Pietro Sampaio Baruselli, Laís Ângelo de Abreu, Vanessa Romário de Paula, Bruno Carvalho, Emanuelle Almeida Gricio, Fernando Kenji Mori, Lígia Mattos Rebeis, Sofía Albertini, Alexandre Henrily de Souza, Michael D'Occhio
{"title":"应用辅助生殖技术和生殖管理来减少奶牛和肉牛的二氧化碳当量排放:综述。","authors":"Pietro Sampaio Baruselli, Laís Ângelo de Abreu, Vanessa Romário de Paula, Bruno Carvalho, Emanuelle Almeida Gricio, Fernando Kenji Mori, Lígia Mattos Rebeis, Sofía Albertini, Alexandre Henrily de Souza, Michael D'Occhio","doi":"10.1590/1984-3143-AR2023-0060","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Methane emission from beef and dairy cattle combined contributes around 4.5-5.0% of total anthropogenic global methane. In addition to enteric methane (CH<sub>4</sub>) produced by the rumen, cattle production also contributes carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) (feed), nitrous oxide (N<sub>2</sub>O) (feed production, manure) and other CH<sub>4</sub> (manure) to the total greenhouse gas (GHG) budget of beef and dairy production systems. The relative contribution in standard dairy systems is typically enteric CH<sub>4</sub> 58%, feed 29% and manure 10%. Herds with low production efficiency can have an enteric CH<sub>4</sub> contribution up to 90%. Digestibility of feed can impact CH<sub>4</sub> emission intensity. Low fertility herds also have a greater enteric CH<sub>4</sub> contribution. Animals with good feed conversion efficiency have a lower emission intensity of CH<sub>4</sub>/kg of meat or milk. Feed efficient heifers tend to be lean and have delayed puberty. Fertility is a major driver of profit in both beef and dairy cattle, and it is highly important to apply multi-trait selection when shifting herds towards improved efficiency and reduced CH<sub>4</sub>. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been identified for feed efficiency in cattle and are used in genomic selection. SNPs can be utilized in artificial insemination and embryo transfer to increase the proportion of cattle that have the attributes of efficiency, fertility and reduced enteric CH<sub>4</sub>. Prepubertal heifers genomically selected for favourable traits can have oocytes recovered to produce IVF embryos. Reproductive technology is predicted to be increasingly adopted to reduce generation interval and accelerate the rate of genetic gain for efficiency, fertility and low CH<sub>4</sub> in cattle. The relatively high contribution of cattle to anthropogenic global methane has focussed attention on strategies to reduce enteric CH<sub>4</sub> without compromising efficiency and fertility. Assisted reproductive technology has an important role in achieving the goal of multiplying and distributing cattle that have good efficiency, fertility and low CH<sub>4</sub>.</p>","PeriodicalId":7889,"journal":{"name":"Animal Reproduction","volume":"20 2","pages":"e20230060"},"PeriodicalIF":1.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10503887/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Applying assisted reproductive technology and reproductive management to reduce CO<sub>2</sub>-equivalent emission in dairy and beef cattle: a review.\",\"authors\":\"Pietro Sampaio Baruselli, Laís Ângelo de Abreu, Vanessa Romário de Paula, Bruno Carvalho, Emanuelle Almeida Gricio, Fernando Kenji Mori, Lígia Mattos Rebeis, Sofía Albertini, Alexandre Henrily de Souza, Michael D'Occhio\",\"doi\":\"10.1590/1984-3143-AR2023-0060\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Methane emission from beef and dairy cattle combined contributes around 4.5-5.0% of total anthropogenic global methane. In addition to enteric methane (CH<sub>4</sub>) produced by the rumen, cattle production also contributes carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) (feed), nitrous oxide (N<sub>2</sub>O) (feed production, manure) and other CH<sub>4</sub> (manure) to the total greenhouse gas (GHG) budget of beef and dairy production systems. The relative contribution in standard dairy systems is typically enteric CH<sub>4</sub> 58%, feed 29% and manure 10%. Herds with low production efficiency can have an enteric CH<sub>4</sub> contribution up to 90%. Digestibility of feed can impact CH<sub>4</sub> emission intensity. Low fertility herds also have a greater enteric CH<sub>4</sub> contribution. Animals with good feed conversion efficiency have a lower emission intensity of CH<sub>4</sub>/kg of meat or milk. Feed efficient heifers tend to be lean and have delayed puberty. Fertility is a major driver of profit in both beef and dairy cattle, and it is highly important to apply multi-trait selection when shifting herds towards improved efficiency and reduced CH<sub>4</sub>. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been identified for feed efficiency in cattle and are used in genomic selection. SNPs can be utilized in artificial insemination and embryo transfer to increase the proportion of cattle that have the attributes of efficiency, fertility and reduced enteric CH<sub>4</sub>. Prepubertal heifers genomically selected for favourable traits can have oocytes recovered to produce IVF embryos. Reproductive technology is predicted to be increasingly adopted to reduce generation interval and accelerate the rate of genetic gain for efficiency, fertility and low CH<sub>4</sub> in cattle. The relatively high contribution of cattle to anthropogenic global methane has focussed attention on strategies to reduce enteric CH<sub>4</sub> without compromising efficiency and fertility. 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Applying assisted reproductive technology and reproductive management to reduce CO2-equivalent emission in dairy and beef cattle: a review.
Methane emission from beef and dairy cattle combined contributes around 4.5-5.0% of total anthropogenic global methane. In addition to enteric methane (CH4) produced by the rumen, cattle production also contributes carbon dioxide (CO2) (feed), nitrous oxide (N2O) (feed production, manure) and other CH4 (manure) to the total greenhouse gas (GHG) budget of beef and dairy production systems. The relative contribution in standard dairy systems is typically enteric CH4 58%, feed 29% and manure 10%. Herds with low production efficiency can have an enteric CH4 contribution up to 90%. Digestibility of feed can impact CH4 emission intensity. Low fertility herds also have a greater enteric CH4 contribution. Animals with good feed conversion efficiency have a lower emission intensity of CH4/kg of meat or milk. Feed efficient heifers tend to be lean and have delayed puberty. Fertility is a major driver of profit in both beef and dairy cattle, and it is highly important to apply multi-trait selection when shifting herds towards improved efficiency and reduced CH4. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been identified for feed efficiency in cattle and are used in genomic selection. SNPs can be utilized in artificial insemination and embryo transfer to increase the proportion of cattle that have the attributes of efficiency, fertility and reduced enteric CH4. Prepubertal heifers genomically selected for favourable traits can have oocytes recovered to produce IVF embryos. Reproductive technology is predicted to be increasingly adopted to reduce generation interval and accelerate the rate of genetic gain for efficiency, fertility and low CH4 in cattle. The relatively high contribution of cattle to anthropogenic global methane has focussed attention on strategies to reduce enteric CH4 without compromising efficiency and fertility. Assisted reproductive technology has an important role in achieving the goal of multiplying and distributing cattle that have good efficiency, fertility and low CH4.
期刊介绍:
Animal Reproduction (AR) publishes original scientific papers and invited literature reviews, in the form of Basic Research, Biotechnology, Applied Research and Review Articles, with the goal of contributing to a better understanding of phenomena related to animal reproduction.
The scope of the journal applies to students, researchers and practitioners in the fields of veterinary, biology and animal science, also being of interest to practitioners of human medicine. Animal Reproduction Journal is the official organ of the Brazilian College of Animal Reproduction in Brazil.