Assessing the sustainability of a combined extensive-intensive beef production system : the case of French suckler cow-calf farms integrated with Italian beef fattening herds
2016
Berton, M | Lherm, M | Agabriel, J | Gallo, L | Ramanzin, M | Sturaro, E
This study aimed to analyse the sustainability of the beef system based on the integration between pasture-based suckler cow-calf farms in France (Massif Central) and cereal-based fattening farms of northern Italy. Two indicators were considered: carbon footprint (kg CO2-eq per kg body weight, BW, sold), and the human-edible feed conversion ratio computed as the ratio between the energy content in human-edible feedstuffs and the energy content of human-edible animal products (HeFCR). The reference unit was the batch (i.e. a group of stock calves homogenous for origin, finishing period and fattening farm). We considered 73 Charolais young bulls batches (4882 heads), born in France (Massif Central), sold to northern Italy beef herds at 405 plus minus 13 kg BW after a 1.16 plus minus 0.13 kg per d weight gain and slaughtered at 729 plus minus 23 kg BW, after a 1.52 plus minus 0.09 kg per d weight gain during fattening. Mean carbon footprint of overall beef production system averaged 13.0 plus minus 0.6 CO2-eq per kg BW, and the French suckler cow-calf phase accounted for 65 per cent of global emissions. Conversely, the French suckler cow-calf phase was more efficient than the Italian beef finishing phase in terms of food supply for the human consumption, as the HeFCR averaged 2.9 plus minus 0.4 and 4.6 plus minus 0.8 MJ per MJ in the French and Italian phases, respectively. Therefore, our results suggest that the evaluation of global sustainability of mountain livestock systems would require the use of different indicators and approaches
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]الكلمات المفتاحية الخاصة بالمكنز الزراعي (أجروفوك)
المعلومات البيبليوغرافية
تم تزويد هذا السجل من قبل Instituto Agronómico Mediterráneo de Zaragoza