Measuring Livestock CH4 Emissions with the Laser Methane Detector: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Laser Methane Detector
3. Aspects of the Measurement Protocol
3.1. Distance to the Animal
3.2. Duration of Recording
3.3. Measurement Interval
3.4. Total Number of Repeats per Animal
3.5. Number of Consecutive Days per Measurement
3.6. Time of Day
3.7. Animal Activity
3.8. Pointing Angle
3.9. Location
3.10. Operator
3.11. Device
3.12. Animal Welfare
4. Steps in LMD Data Processing
4.1. Exclusion of Profiles
4.2. Exclusion of Single Data Points
4.3. Accouting for Background CH4 Concentration/Offset
4.4. Accounting for Distance
4.5. Transformation of the CH4 Values
4.6. Separation of Peaks and Troughs
4.7. Separation of Eructation and Respiration
4.8. Reduction of Data to Point Measurements
4.9. Estimation of Daily CH4 Production
5. Comparison with Other Techniques
- Technical evaluations of the accuracy of the sensor and
- Evaluations of the overall measurement and analysis protocol for the LMD.
6. Applications
6.1. Genetics
6.2. Nutrition
6.3. Farming Systems and Breeds
6.4. Health and Metabolism
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Aim | No 1 | Dis 2 | Dur 3 | Rep 4 | Selected Result(s) | Ref 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Comparison of LMD 6 and RC 7 | 20 dairy cows | 1 m | 5 min | 3 | Correlation between daily CH4 g/kg energy corrected milk with LMD and RC: 0.82 | [51] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis; nutritional study | 2 + 12 dairy cows | 0.6–1.2 m | 2–3 min | 26 | Correlation of daily CH4 production with RC and LMD: 0.55; natural grassland hay not recommended for indoor-fed cows | [18] |
Relationship of blood serum parameters with CH4 emission | 46 ewes | 1 m | 3 min | - | Zinc, β-hydroxybutyrate, and non-esterified fatty acid blood concentrations had a partially breed-specific significant impact on CH4 emission | [58] |
Comparison of LMD, RC and MIR 8; | 30 dairy cows | 1 m | 6 min | 12 | No agreement of LMD with RC or MIR | [17] |
Book chapter reviewing previous work with the LMD | NA 9 | NA | NA | NA | Discussion of advantages and challenges of the LMD | [27] |
Development of protocol for data analysis | 2 dairy cows | 3 m | 5 min | 15 | Number of peaks best phenotype to discriminate high and low emitters | [42] |
Comparison of CH4 emissions from different husbandry systems | 448 dairy cows | 1 m | 2 min | 3 | CH4 concentrations were affected by location, breed, and husbandry system along a rural-urban gradient | [19] |
Genetic analyses | 330 ewes | 1 m | 3 min | - | h2 10 for CH4 concentration 0.00–0.03 | [15] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 4 goats | 2 m | 4–5 min | 60 | No influence of restraint on CH4 concentration; restraint of grazing goats can facilitate LMD measurements | [31] |
Development of data analysis | 46 dairy cows | 1 m | 5–6 min | 6–8 | Correlation of daily CH4 production with RC, and several LMD phenotypes: up to 0.6; simple phenotypes not outperformed by those considering the time series nature of data | [54] |
Comparison of LMD and other techniques for CH4 measurement | NA | NA | NA | NA | Review and meta-analysis; sufficient correlation between methods for methods to be combined for international genetic studies | [10] |
Comparison of LMD and NDIR 11 sniffer | 48 dairy cows | 1 m | 5 min | 6 | Moderate agreement between LMD and NDIR sniffer | [46] |
Effect of a novel feed additive on CH4 | 30 dairy cows | 1 m | 4 min | - | Feed supplement significantly reduced CH4 concentration (p < 0.05) | [16] |
Nutritional study | 45 dairy cows | 1 m | - | - | Daily CH4 production and CH4 per kg milk decreased by grass-feeding compared to a total mixed ration | [57] |
Breed comparison | 24 beef cows | 3 m | 1 min | 72 | No between-breed difference in CH4 output | [32] |
Genetic analyses | 622 dairy cows | 2 m | 5 min | 1–3 | h2 for CH4 phenotypes 0.05–0.28 | [14] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 4 + 12 goats | 1 m | 2 min | 24 + 63 | Recording interval should be 0.1 s; high variability of CH4 concentration across individual goats and days; LMD able to detect diurnal pattern of CH4 production in goats | [26] |
Development of data analysis, comparison of LMD, GF 12 and NDIR/FTIR 13 sniffer | 156 dairy cows | 1, 2, 2.5 m | 5 min | 1–6 | Number of CH4 peaks = respiratory rate; similar ranking by LMD, GF and NDIR/FTIR sniffer sensors, regression equation for CH4 g/d from LMD data | [35] |
Nutritional study | 18 goats | 1.5 m | 5 min | - | CH4 production affected by energy and tannin levels of feed, and sex | [50] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 71 + 18 dairy cows | 1 m | ~5 min | NA | Optimal recording duration > 3 min, correlation of LMD and RC CH4 average 0.47, regression equation for CH4 g/d from LMD data | [33] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 8 dairy cows | 3 m | 1 min | 40 | The proposed LMD measurement protocol could not be successfully implemented due to local weather conditions (grazing) | [43] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | - | 0.4–2.5 m | 5–10 min | NA | Duration of recording should be >2 min; no significant change in CH4 concentration above 0.4 m distance; pointing angle, operator, LMD unit, time of day have significant effect on CH4 concentration; number of peaks is the respiratory rate; prediction equation for total daily CH4 from LMD record | [34] |
Comparison of LMD and RC, comparison of 2 LMD devices | 4 dairy cows | NA | continuous | NA | Good agreement in concentration in spent air from RC measured with RC and LMD, good agreement between 2 LMD devices | [40] |
Genetic analyses | 57 dairy cows | 1 m | 1–5 min | Up to 9 | h2 for CH4 concentration 0.05 | [13] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 32 sheep | 1 m | 5–10 min | 9–12 | Correlation of daily CH4 production with RC and LMD: 0.57 | [29] |
Comparison of Bonsmara, Nguni and Jersey cattle | 12 heifers | 3 m | 1 min | 40 | Differences in CH4 concentration between breeds and feed sources | [30] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 24 ewes; 72 steers | ? | 2 min; 4 min | 5; 3 | Low correlation of CH4 from RC and LMD-model improved by DMI 14; best LMD phenotypes: length of eructation and maximum of respiration CH4 | [38] |
Review summarizing previous work with the LMD | NA | NA | NA | NA | The LMD is a very recent tool and has potential to measure enteric CH4 production in ruminants, further validation needed | [44] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 2 + 24 dairy cows; 4 sheep | 2.75 m | 5 min | - | LMD has good sensitivity and specificity in detecting high and low CH4 concentrations as compared to RC; cow activity and meteorological factors affect CH4 concentrations | [36] |
Development of protocol for measurement and data analysis | 72 cross-bred steers | 1 m | 4 min | - | Significant regression of LMD on RC with R2 = 0.27; similar results for mean of all values, all peaks, respiration peaks or eructation peaks | [28] |
Comparison of LMD and RC | 10 dairy cows | 2.3 m | continuous (12–16 h) | NA | Good agreement in concentration in spent air from RC measured with RC and LMD | [45] |
Development of protocol and data analysis | 71 dairy cows | 3 m | 15–25 s | 3 | LMD is applicable for cows, data make biological sense | [12] |
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Method | Purchase Cost | Running Cost | Labour | Repeatability | Behaviour Alteration | Throughput |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Respiration chamber | High | High | High | High | High | Low |
SF6 tracer gas technique | Medium | High | High | Medium | Medium | Medium |
Breath analysers (“sniffers”) | Low | Low | Low | Medium | None | High |
GreenFeed | Medium | Medium | Low | Medium | Low | Medium |
Laser methane detector | Low | Low | High | Low | Low–medium | Medium |
Variable | Minimum Observed | Reference (Example) | Maximum Observed | Reference (Example) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Distance to animal | 1 m | [28] | 3 m | [12] |
Duration of recording | 15 s | [12] | 10 min | [29] |
Measurement interval | 0.1 s | [26] | 5 s | [30] |
Repeats per day | 1 | [14] | 6 | [31] |
Repeats per animal | 1 | [14] | 72 (cow); 63 (goat) | [26,32] |
Consecutive days | 1 | [14] | 10 | [30] |
Category | Point Measurement | Explanation 1 |
---|---|---|
All values | Mean | Breath CH4 concentration including re-inhaled and exhaled eructation and background CH4 concentration during inhalation |
Number | Not meaningful – number is pre-defined by measuring interval (e.g., 2 per s) | |
Maximum | Highest single CH4 concentration | |
Sum | Cumulative CH4 concentration including background | |
Peaks | Mean | Breath CH4 concentration including re-inhaled and exhaled eructation CH4 without background |
Number | Proxy for breath frequency (not for CH4 emission) | |
Sum | Cumulative breath CH4 concentration without background | |
Respiration peaks 2 | Mean | Breath CH4 concentration without eructation |
Number | Breath frequency but without times of eructation—physiologically not meaningful | |
Maximum | Highest non-eructation CH4 peak | |
Sum | Cumulative breath CH4 concentration without eructation and background | |
Time | Duration of respiration | |
Percentage | Of respiration peaks from all peaks in a recording—can be used to validate physiological plausibility of the data | |
Eructation peaks | Mean | Breath CH4 concentration from eructation only |
Number | Breath frequency during eructation—physiologically not meaningful | |
Maximum | Highest single CH4 concentration (same as for “all values”) | |
Sum | Cumulative breath CH4 concentration from eructation only | |
Time | Duration of eructation | |
Percentage | Of eructation peaks from all peaks in a recording—can be used to validate physiological plausibility of the data | |
Eructation events | Mean of the maxima | Series of the highest CH4 concentrations |
Number | Eructation frequency—not a real CH4 phenotype but can be used to validate physiological plausibility of the data | |
Maximum | Highest single CH4 concentration (same as for “all values”) | |
Sum of the maxima | Cumulative breath CH4 concentration from the series of the highest CH4 concentrations |
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Sorg, D. Measuring Livestock CH4 Emissions with the Laser Methane Detector: A Review. Methane 2022, 1, 38-57. https://doi.org/10.3390/methane1010004
Sorg D. Measuring Livestock CH4 Emissions with the Laser Methane Detector: A Review. Methane. 2022; 1(1):38-57. https://doi.org/10.3390/methane1010004
Chicago/Turabian StyleSorg, Diana. 2022. "Measuring Livestock CH4 Emissions with the Laser Methane Detector: A Review" Methane 1, no. 1: 38-57. https://doi.org/10.3390/methane1010004