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Effects of Two Manure Additives on Methane Emissions from Dairy Manure

Jessie Cluett, Andrew VanderZaag, Hambaliou Baldé, S. M. McGinn, Earl Jenson, Alexander C. Hayes, Sylvanus Ekwe

2020Animals16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Liquid manure is a significant source of methane (CH4), a greenhouse gas. Many livestock farms use manure additives for practical and agronomic purposes, but the effect on CH4 emissions is unknown. To address this gap, two lab studies were conducted, evaluating the CH4 produced from liquid dairy manure with Penergetic-g® (12 mg/L, 42 mg/L, and 420 mg/L) or AgrimestMix® (30.3 mL/L). In the first study, cellulose produced 378 mL CH4/g volatile solids (VS) at 38 °C and there was no significant difference with Penergetic-g® at 12 mg/L or 42 mg/L. At the same temperature, dairy manure produced 254 mL CH4/g VS and was not significantly different from 42 mg/L Penergetic-g®. In the second lab study, the dairy manure control produced 187 mL CH4/g VS at 37 °C and 164 mL CH4/g VS at 20 °C, and there was no significant difference with AgrimestMix (30.3 mL/L) or Penergetic-g® (420 mg/L) at either temperature. Comparisons of manure composition before and after incubation indicated that the additives had no effect on pH or VS, and small and inconsistent effects on other constituents. Overall, neither additive affected CH4 production in the lab. The results suggest that farms using these additives are likely to have normal CH4 emissions from stored manure.

Topics & Concepts

ManureMethaneChemistryAnimal scienceGreenhouse gasMethane emissionsSignificant differenceIncubationChicken manureCelluloseManure managementAgronomyMathematicsBiologyBiochemistryStatisticsOrganic chemistryEcologyAnaerobic Digestion and Biogas ProductionOdor and Emission Control TechnologiesAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact
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