Dietary supplementation with calcium peroxide improves methane mitigation potential of finishing beef cattle

E. Roskam, D. A. Kenny, A. K. Kelly, V. O'Flaherty, S. M. Waters

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Calcium peroxide (CaO2) offers potential as an anti-methanogenic dietary feed material. The compound has been previously assessed in vitro, with methane (CH4) reductions of > 50% observed. The objective of this study was to assess dietary supplementation of CaO2 at different inclusion levels and physical formats in a finishing beef system on the effects of animal performance, gaseous emissions, rumen fermentation parameters and digestibility. Seventy-two dairy-beef bulls (465 kg; 16 months of age) were randomly allocated to one of four treatments supplemented with CaO2; in a coarse ration (1) CON (0% CaO2), (2) LO (1.35% CaO2), (3) HI (2.25% CaO2), and in a pellet (4) HP (2.25% CaO2) (n = 18). Animals received their respective treatments for a 77 d finishing period, during which DM intake (American Calan Inc., Northwood, NH), average daily gain (ADG), feed efficiency and enteric emissions (GreenFeed emissions monitoring system; C-Lock Inc., Rapid City, SD) were measured. The finishing diet was isonitrogenous and isoenergetic across the four treatment groups, composed of 60:40 grass silage:concentrate. Silage was offered each morning (0900 h), and concentrates were offered twice daily (0800 and 1500 h). Supplementation of CaO2 had no effect on final weight (P = 0.09), ADG (P = 0.22) or feed efficiency (P = 0.13). Regarding DM intake, the HI treatment group consumed in the order of 1 kg less than CON (P < 0.01), while HP did not affect DM intake compared to CON (P = 0.79). Across treatments, DM intake ranged from 8.43 to 9.57 kg/d, equating to 1.6–1.8% of BW. Daily CH4 values for the control were 240 g/d, while CaO2 supplemented diets ranged from 202 to 170 g/d, resulting in daily CH4 reductions of 16, 29 and 27% for LO, HI and HP, respectively, compared to CON (P < 0.0001). Additionally, hydrogen was reduced in CaO2 supplemented animals by 32–36% relative to CON (P < 0.0001), with a simultaneous reduction in volatile fatty acid production (P < 0.01) and an increase in propionate concentration (P < 0.0001). Across all universally accepted CH4 metrics (yield, intensity, production), the dietary inclusion of CaO2 whether at a low or high rate, or indeed, through a coarse ration or pelleted format reduced CH4 in the order of 16–32%. This study also concluded that CaO2 can successfully endure the pelleting process, therefore, improving ease of delivery if implemented at farm level.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101340
JournalAnimal
Volume18
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Keywords

  • Bovine
  • Digestibility
  • Greenhouse gas emissions
  • Hydrogen
  • Oxidative reduction potential

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