Abstract
Methane emissions in ruminant livestock has become a hot topic, given the pressure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions drastically in the European Union over the next 10 to 30 yr. During the 2021 United Nations Climate Change conference, countries also made collective commitments to curb methane emissions by 2050. Genetic selection for low-methane-emitting animals, particularly dairy cows, is one possible strategy for mitigation. However, it is essential to understand how methane emissions in lactating animals vary along lactation and across lactations. This understanding is useful when making decisions for future phenotyping strategies, such as the frequency and duration of phenotyping within and across lactations. Therefore, the objectives of this study were to estimate (1) genetic parameters for 2 methane traits: methane concentration (MeC) and methane production (MeP) at 2 parity levels in Danish Holstein cows across the entire lactation using random regression models; (2) genetic correlations within and between methane traits across the entire lactation; and (3) genetic correlations between the methane traits and economically important traits throughout first lactation. Methane concentration (n = 19,639) records of 575 Danish Holstein cows from a research farm measured between 2013 and 2020 were available. Subsequently, CH4 production in grams/day (MeP; n = 13,866) was calculated; MeP and MeC for first and second lactation (L1 and L2) were analyzed as separate traits: MeC_L1, MeP_L1, MeC_L2, and MeP_L2. Heritabilities, variance components, and genetic correlations within and between the 4 CH4 traits were estimated using random regression models with Legendre polynomials. The additive genetic and permanent environmental effects were modeled using second-order Legendre polynomial for lactation weeks. Estimated heritabilities for MeP_L1 ranged between 0.11 and 0.49, for MeC_L1 between 0.10 and 0.28, for MeP_L2 between 0.14 and 0.36, and for MeC_L2 between 0.13 and 0.29. In general, heritability estimates of MeC traits were lower and more stable throughout lactation and were similar between lactations compared with MeP. Genetic correlations (within trait) at different lactation weeks were generally highly positive (0.7) for most of the first lactation, except for the correlation of early lactation (<10 wk) with late lactation (>40 wk) where the correlation was the lowest (<0.5). Genetic correlations between methane traits were moderate to highly correlated during early and mid lactation. Finally, MeP_L1 has stronger genetic correlations with energy-corrected milk and dry matter intake compared with MeC_L1. In conclusion, both traits are different along (and across) lactation(s) and they correlated differently with production, maintenance, and intake traits, which is important to consider when including one of them in a future breeding objective.
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