Key considerations for the use of seaweed to reduce enteric methane emissions from cattle

Abstract: 

Enteric methane emissions are the single largest source of direct greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) in beef and dairy value chains and a substantial contributor to anthropogenic methane emissions globally. In late 2019, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) and the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR) convened approximately 50 stakeholders representing research and production of seaweeds, animal feeds, dairy cattle, and beef and dairy foods to discuss challenges and opportunities associated with the use of seaweed-based ingredients to reduce enteric methane emissions. This Perspective article describes the considerations identified by the workshop participants and suggests next steps for the further development and evaluation of seaweed-based feed ingredients as enteric methane mitigants. Although numerous compounds derived from sources other than seaweed have been identified as having enteric methane mitigation potential, these mitigants are outside the scope of this article.

Author(s): 
Timothy D. Kurt
Charles Yarish
Martin R. Weisbjerg
Adele Turzillo
Juan M. Tricarico
Yan Sun
Nichole N. Price
Sergey V. Nuzhdin
Ermias Kebreab
Kenneth F. Kalscheur
Alexander N. Hristov
Matthias Hess
Athanasios Foukis
Nikki Dutta
Devan Paulus Compart
Sandra Vijn
Keywords: 
methane
cattle
seaweed
dairy
beef
agriculture
livestock
ruminant
Article Source: 
frontiers in Veterinary Science
Category: 
Ecological Services
Food Security or Needs
Uses of Seaweeds: Feed