Abstract

Abstract. Livestock numbers are increasing to supply the growing demand for meat-rich diets. The sustainability of this trend has been questioned, and future environmental changes, such as climate change, may cause some regions to become less suitable for livestock. Livestock and wild herbivores are strongly dependent on the nutritional chemistry of forage plants. Nutrition is positively linked to weight gains, milk production and reproductive success, and nutrition is also a key determinant of enteric methane production. In this meta-analysis, we assessed the effects of growing conditions on forage quality by compiling published measurements of grass nutritive value and combining these data with climatic, edaphic and management information. We found that forage nutritive value was reduced at higher temperatures and increased by nitrogen fertiliser addition, likely driven by a combination of changes to species identity and changes to physiology and phenology. These relationships were combined with multiple published empirical models to estimate forage- and temperature-driven changes to cattle enteric methane production. This suggested a previously undescribed positive climate change feedback, where elevated temperatures reduce grass nutritive value and correspondingly may increase methane production by 0.9 % with a 1 °C temperature rise and 4.5 % with a 5 °C rise (model average), thus creating an additional climate forcing effect. Future methane production increases are expected to be largest in parts of North America, central and eastern Europe and Asia, with the geographical extent of hotspots increasing under a high emissions scenario. These estimates require refinement and a greater knowledge of the abundance, size, feeding regime and location of cattle, and the representation of heat stress should be included in future modelling work. However, our results indicate that the cultivation of more nutritious forage plants and reduced livestock farming in warming regions may reduce this additional source of pastoral greenhouse gas emissions.

Highlights

  • Global meat production has increased rapidly in recent years, from 71 million tonnes in 1961 to 318 million tonnes in 2014 (FAOSTAT, 2016)

  • There was a large range in mean neutral detergent fibre (NDF) across the forage grass species from the lowest, Pennisetum clandestinum (46 %) and Lolium multiflorum (46 %), to the highest, Aristida longiseta (87 %)

  • The highest mean crude protein (CP) was recorded in Pennisetum clandestinum (23 %), and the lowest was recorded from another member of the same genus, Pennisetum purpureum (9 %)

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Summary

Introduction

Global meat production has increased rapidly in recent years, from 71 million tonnes in 1961 to 318 million tonnes in 2014 (FAOSTAT, 2016). This is due to population growth and a transition to meat-rich diets across many countries (Tilman and Clark, 2014). Livestock farming, including feed production, land use change, enteric sources and manure decomposition, produces approximately 7.1 gigatonnes of CO2 and CO2 equivalents annually (GT CO2eq); this accounts for 15 % of anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (FAO, 2013).

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