Otago Daily Times

Sheepburpi­ng project given wheels

- SALLY RAE

THIS is a tale of burping sheep.

Among the work AgResearch scientists have been doing to reduce methane emissions from agricultur­e is a project to breed sheep that naturally produce less methane — the gas released in the burps of ruminant livestock.

Having determined sheep could be bred for lower methane emissions, the project was now being rolledout to farms, giving breeders the opportunit­y to measure and select sheep with lowered environmen­tal impacts.

Scientists had been working on the prospect of low methane sheep for quite some time, AgResearch Invermayba­sed senior scientist Dr Suzanne Rowe said yesterday.

Initially, sheep were measured through full respirator­y chambers which took about 48 hours and cost about $1000 a sheep. It was both expensive and intensive, Dr Rowe said.

Once it was clear there was genetic variation and it could be bred for, the next step was to find a way to measure and monitor in a more lowcost way that was easier on the animal and could also be measured off pasture.

Invermayba­sed principal scientist John McEwan and ethics and welfare adviser Grant Shackell worked with a team of engineers at Lincoln to produce an effective shortterm measure.

Once they had a design that worked for a single sheep, the idea was to have something that could measure 12 sheep.

Wheels were then put on the trailer so it could park up on a farm, measure what sheep emitted for an hour, and then turn them back out on grass.

Breeders were interested — ‘‘they are happy to do anything they can to help environmen­tal impacts’’ — provided it did not impact on health and productivi­ty, Dr Rowe said.

While there were other strategies for mitigating methane, this one was ‘‘first cab off the rank’’ — it was simple, straightfo­rward and could be applied straight away.

It had attracted the attention of research colleagues overseas; a trailer had already been sent to Ireland and there was also interest from Norway and China.

For Dr Rowe, it had been an exciting project to be involved with, going from not even knowing whether methane emissions from sheep were heritable, to finding out it was and could be bred for, to measuring animals and the end point of seeing it being delivered onfarm.

It was nice to be able to follow a research project through from conception to implementa­tion to industry, she said.

The project had been well supported by both government organisati­ons and industry, including the New Zealand Agricultur­al Greenhouse Gas Research Centre, Pastoral Greenhouse Gas Research Consortium and Beef + Lamb New Zealand Genetics, she said.

 ?? PHOTO: AGRESEARCH ?? Getting a measure on emissions . . . AgResearch scientist Dr Suzanne Rowe with a trailer being used to measure methane emissions in sheep.
PHOTO: AGRESEARCH Getting a measure on emissions . . . AgResearch scientist Dr Suzanne Rowe with a trailer being used to measure methane emissions in sheep.

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