This study measured the greenhouse gas emissions from a typical cow-calf cattle operation in Florida over 10 years. The largest sources of emissions were enteric fermentation from digestion (59%) and manure management (23%). Total average annual emissions were 11,733 tons of CO2 equivalents. Ongoing research is further investigating methane emissions from cattle using sulfur hexafluoride tracer gas techniques under different grazing conditions.
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Beef Cattle GHG Emissions in Florida Grazing
1. Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Beef
Cattle Under Grazing Conditions in
Florida
Marta Moura Kohmann- ABE/UF
Dr. Clyde W. Fraisse- ABE/UF
Dr. Hilary Swain, Archbold Biological Station
Dr. Martin Ruiz-Moreno, ANS/UF
Dr. Lynn E. Sollenberger, PhD., AGR/UF
Dr. Nicolas DiLorenzo, ANS/UF
Francine Messias Ciríaco, ANS/UF
Darren D. Henry, ANS/UF
April 2013
2. Background
2
US 2010 Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Economic Sector
(percents based on Tg CO2 Eq., left) and in Agriculture (right).
Source: EPA, 2012.
33.8
26.9
20.4
7.3
5.6
5.4
0.7
Electric Power
Industry
Transportation
Industry
Agriculture
Commercial
Residential
U.S. Territories
Total (2010): 6.821.8 Tg CO2 Eq.
Agriculture (2010): 494.8 Tg CO2 Eq.
42.0
28.6
14.2
9.6
1.8
1.7
0.8
0.8
0.2 0.1
0.1
0.1
N2O from Agricultural
Soil Management
Enteric Fermentation
Manure Management
CO2 from Fossil Fuel
Combustion
CH4 and N2O from Forest Fires
Rice Cultivation
Liming of Agricultural Soils
Urea Fertilization
CO2 and N2O from Managed
Peatlands
Mobile Combustion
N2O from Forest Soils
Field Burning of Agricultural
Residues
3. Importance
• Cattle industry in Florida
– 1.71 million head of cattle
– 940,000 are beef cattle
– 890,000 calves born in 2011
• Typical production systems:
– Cow-calf operations
– low inputs
– pasture based
3
Source: Florida Department of Agriculture and Costumer Services (2012)
4. Objective
The objective is to calculate the carbon footprint of
a typical cow-calf operation in Florida..
Specific objectives are
– Identify main Greenhouse Gas (GHG) sources
– Understand the model used
– Further investigation of ruminal fermentation with
field trials
4
5. Methodology
• Buck Island Ranch: on lease from the MacArthur
Foundation to the Archbold Biological Station
• Full-scale working ranch
– 4,500 acres
bahiagrass
– 5,640 acres native
vegetation
– 160 acres citrus
5
6. Methodology
• Cow-calf operation
– 3,000 Brahman-cross cows
– 150 Angus and Charolais bulls
– 2,300 calves annually
• Data: 1998 to 2008
• Identify sources of
Greenhouse Gas
Emissions (GHG)
6
7. Methodology
Animal GHG sources
• Manure- CH4, N2O
• Enteric fermentation
(ruminal)- CH4
Management GHG sources
• Nitrogen fertilization- N2O
• Lime application- CO2
• Burning- CO, CH4, N2O, NOx
• Fossil fuels (molasses
transportation, management
practices)- CO2
7
Anatomy of the cow’s digestive tract.
Source: University of Minnesota Extension.
• Reticulum, rumen and omasum:
anaerobic fermentation
• Hydrolysis and anaerobic oxidation
create H+
CO2 + 8H methane + 2H2O
12. Results
12
• 24.5 kg CO2/ kg live weight that leaves the farm
• 77% of total emissions in cattle production come
from the cow-calf operation part
• If animals double weight after they leave the
farm
~ 16 kg CO2/ kg final live weight
Takashi & Young, 2002
13. Ongoing Research
• Field trials in the North Florida Research and
Educational Center in Marianna, Florida
– Methane measurements using the SF6 technique
– Three stocking rates
– Animal performance (weight gain)
– Pasture measurements (production, nutritive
value)
13
17. Final considerations
• Methane emissions from ruminal fermentation
accounts for 59% of total emissions
• 24.5 kg CO2/ kg live weight that leaves the ranch
• Average 11,733 tons CO2eq/ year
• Model still needs further investigation
• Field experiments
Future research
• In vitro methane measurements
• Parametrization
17
18. Acknowledgements
• This study has been funded by the Agriculture
and Food Research Initiative Competitive
Grant no. 2011-67003-30347 from the USDA-
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
18
Thank you
mkohmann@ufl.edu.com
19. Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Beef
Cattle Under Grazing Conditions in
Florida
Marta Moura Kohmann
Department Agricultural and
Biological Engineering
April 2013