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Measurement of Enteric Methane Emissions by the SF6 Technique Is Not Affected by Ambient Weather Conditions

journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-06, 23:18 authored by PJ Moate, Jennie PryceJennie Pryce, LC Marett, JB Garner, MH Deighton, BE Ribaux, MC Hannah, WJ Wales, SRO Williams
Despite the fact that the sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) tracer technique was developed over 25 years ago to measure methane production from grazing and non‐housed animals, no studies have specifically investigated whether ambient wind speed, temperature, relative humidity and rainfall influence the accuracy of the method. The aim of this research was to investigate how these weather factors influence the measurement of enteric methane production by the SF6 technique. Six different cohorts of dairy cows (40 per cohort) were kept outdoors and fed a common diet during spring in 3 consecutive years. Methane production from individual cows was measured daily over the last 5 days of each 32‐day period. An automated weather station measured air temperature, wind speed, relative humidity and rainfall every 10 minutes. Regression analyses were used to re-late the average daily wind speed, average daily temperature, average daily relative humidity and total daily rainfall measurements to dry matter intake, average daily methane production and methane yield of each cohort of cows. It was concluded that the modified SF6 technique can be used outdoors during a range of wind speeds, ambient temperatures, relative humidities and rainfall conditions without causing a significant effect on the measurement of methane production or methane yield of dairy cows.<p></p>

Funding

This research was funded by Agriculture Victoria Research, Dairy Australia, Gardiner Dairy Foundation, Dairy Futures CRC.

History

Publication Date

2021-02-18

Journal

Animals

Volume

11

Issue

2

Article Number

528

Pagination

13p.

Publisher

MDPI

ISSN

2076-2615

Rights Statement

© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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