Potential use of milk mid-infrared spectra to predict individual methane emission of dairy cows
2012
Dehareng, F. | Delfosse, C. | Froidmont, E. | Soyeurt, H. | Martin, C. | Gengler, N. | Vanlierde, A. | Dardenne, P.
This study investigates the feasibility to predict individual methane (CH₄) emissions from dairy cows using milk mid-infrared (MIR) spectra. To have a large variability of milk composition, two experiments were conducted on 11 lactating Holstein cows (two primiparous and nine multiparous). The first experiment aimed to induce a large variation in CH₄ emission by feeding two different diets: the first one was mainly composed of fresh grass and sugar beet pulp and the second one of maize silage and hay. The second experiment consisted of grass and corn silage with cracked corn, soybean meal and dried pulp. For each milking period, the milk yields were recorded twice daily and a milk sample of 50 ml was collected from each cow and analyzed by MIR spectrometry. Individual CH₄ emissions were measured daily using the sulfur hexafluoride method during a 7-day period. CH₄ daily emissions ranged from 10.2 to 47.1 g CH₄/kg of milk. The spectral data were transformed to represent an average daily milk spectrum (AMS), which was related to the recorded daily CH₄ data. By assuming a delay before the production of fermentation products in the rumen and their use to produce milk components, five different calculations were used: AMS at days 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5 and 2 compared with the CH₄ measurement. The equations were built using Partial Least Squares regression. From the calculated R²cᵥ, it appears that the accuracy of CH₄ prediction by MIR changed in function of the milking days. In our experimental conditions, the AMS at day 1.5 compared with the measure of CH₄ emissions gave the best results. The R² and s.e. of the cross-validation were equal to 0.79 and 5.14 g of CH₄/kg of milk. The multiple correlation analysis performed in this study showed the existence of a close relationship between milk fatty acid (FA) profile and CH₄ emission at day 1.5. The lower R² (R² = 0.76) obtained between FA profile and CH₄ emission compared with the one corresponding to the obtained calibration (R²c = 0.87) shows the interest to apply directly the developed CH₄ equation instead of the use of correlations between FA and CH₄. In conclusion, our preliminary results suggest the feasibility of direct CH₄ prediction from milk MIR spectra. Additional research has the potential to improve the calibrations even further. This alternative method could be useful to predict the individual CH₄ emissions at farm level or at the regional scale and it also could be used to identify low-CH₄-emitting cows.
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