Understanding How a Red Seaweed Reduces Methane Emissions from Cows

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Methane is the second-largest contributor to climate warming after carbon dioxide, and so scientists have put a lot of attention toward addressing one of the top sources: methane emissions from livestock.

Methane is the second-largest contributor to climate warming after carbon dioxide, and so scientists have put a lot of attention toward addressing one of the top sources: methane emissions from livestock. In other words, cow burps are bad for the planet.

Farmers add various seaweeds to cow diets as a source of protein, unsaturated fats, and other health-promoting ingredients that provide immediate energy, says Dipti Pitta of the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, and a 2016 study in Australia found that feeding sheep a species of red seaweed called Asparagopsis taxiformis (AT) eliminated methane emissions by 80%.

But the effects of this seaweed vary widely, and so researchers from Pitta’s Agricultural Systems and Microbial Genomics Laboratory (ASMG lab) and Pennsylvania State University undertook an assessment of how it alters the microbiome in the rumen, a compartment of a cow’s stomach. The results are published in the journal mBio.

Read more at: Penn State University

Bonnie Vecchiarelli, second from left; Dipti Pitta, middle; and Nagaraju Indugu, right, are among the authors on a new paper examining the mechanisms by which a type of red seaweed inhibits methane emissions from dairy cows, with John Toth and Rachel Duffey, also of the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine. (Photo Credit: Dipti Pitta)