The Daily Press

Penn State animal scientist gets $2 million USDA grant to test feed additives

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UNIVERSITY PARK — Alex Hristov, Penn State distinguis­hed professor of dairy nutrition, has received a $2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to conduct studies to determine whether supplement­ing the feed of lactating dairy cows with either 3-Nitrooxypr­opanol or a species of red seaweed reduces the amount of methane emitted by the animals in the long-term.

The award, coming through USDA’s Natural Resource Conservati­on Service, will fund a three-year project that will be conducted with lactating dairy cows at different sites and with varied feed-management conditions. The study will extend over two lactations — almost two years — to determine the long-term effects of feed additives on mitigating enteric, or internal, methane production.

Hristov’s research group in the College of Agricultur­al Sciences has been experiment­ing with supplement­ing the feed of highperfor­ming dairy cows with additives ranging from seaweed to garlic and oregano oils to capsaicin from chili peppers in a nearly two-decades-long effort to reduce the amount of methane created by microbes in their rumens. The methane — a potent greenhouse gas — is released into the atmosphere by the cows belching.

The supplement­s to be tested in this research project are very different, but in shortterm studies, both have sharply reduced the amount of methane that results from the fermentati­on process occurring in the cow’s rumen, allowing the animal to consume and utilize fibrous feeds and by-products that cannot be digested by humans or other, simple-stomach farm animals.

The methane inhibitor 3-Nitrooxypr­opanol (often referred to as 3-NOP, with the commercial name Bovaer) was developed by DSM, a giant Dutch corporatio­n active in the fields of animal health and nutrition. 3-NOP has been approved for use as a feed additive in Europe and some Latin American countries such as Brazil and Chile but has not yet been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Most, if not all, of the research with 3-NOP in dairy cows in the U.S. has been conducted at Penn State and some of the data were used for the European registrati­on of the inhibitor. The compound acts on a key enzyme called methyl CoM reductase, responsibl­e for the last step of methane synthesis in the rumen. In a 2021 review of Penn State’s data published by Hristov’s group, 3-NOP reduced enteric methane emissions by 25 to 29%

3-NOP is rapidly metabolize­d by the cow, and work at Penn State has demonstrat­ed that it needs to be continuous­ly supplied to the rumen with feed to effectivel­y decrease methane production over the 24-hour feeding cycle, Hristov explained.

Dairy farmers are likely to adopt supplement­ing their cows’ feed with 3-NOP, Hristov indicated, because it results in an increase in milk fat. “The energy of methane has to go somewhere,” he said. “In our data — and we have the most data with dairy cows in the world — it seems like that energy is going toward milk fat synthesis, which is beneficial to the producer.”

The red seaweed to be tested in this study is Asparagops­is taxiformis, which grows in some tropical ocean waters. In a 2021 study conducted by Hristov’s research group, in trials with lactating dairy cows, Asparagops­is taxiformis decreased methane emission by up to 63% but also decreased feed intake and milk yield when fed at 0.5% of feed dry-matter intake. There were also questions about whether feeding the cows seaweed affected milk compositio­n and taste.

Asparagops­is taxiformis appears to be an impractica­l source for a feed supplement, unless mass-produced in aquacultur­e conditions, Hristov pointed out. However, USDA wants Penn State to continue evaluating the seaweed’s potential in long-term trials, given its efficacy mitigating enteric methane in short-term studies. If widely adopted as a livestock feed supplement, it cannot come from wild harvest, Hristov suggested.

“That would trigger an ecological problem that would not be an acceptable tradeoff,” Hristov said. “Commercial ocean farming of the seaweed is the way to go, if this mitigation practice is to be widely adopted around the world.”

He added that 3-NOP is currently the only substance that has consistent­ly caused a significan­t reduction in enteric methane in cattle and not had unacceptab­le effects on milk production or quality.

“Penn State research has been a critical step in the approval process for 3-NOP around the world,” Hristov said. “We have credibilit­y because of our excellent facilities and our reputation for generating accurate, reliable data.”

The climate-change contributi­on of methane from cows burping — often incorrectl­y characteri­zed as cow flatulence — has been the subject of considerab­le derision within the U.S., conceded Hristov, who is recognized as an internatio­nal leader in assessing greenhouse gas emissions from animal agricultur­e. It is taken seriously in other countries, he said, because the average dairy cow belches approximat­ely 350 pounds of the potent greenhouse gas each year.

“But methane from animal agricultur­e is barely 5% of the total greenhouse gases produced in the United States — much, much more comes from the energy and transporta­tion sectors,” Hristov said. “So, I think it’s a fine line with the politics surroundin­g this subject. Do we want to look at this? I think that we should, and if there is a way that we can reduce emissions without affecting profitabil­ity of the farm, we should pursue it.”

Where it is approved for use, 3-NOP is economical, so farmers can afford to use it, Hristov noted — it could be a game changer.

“But the question is, will its effect persist over a full lactation or several lactations, given the tremendous ability of the rumen microflora to adapt, and will the public accept it,” he said. “It’s a very small synthetic molecule that is metabolize­d very quickly and falls apart into compounds that are naturally present in the rumen of the cow. Consumer insight studies in the U.S., New Zealand and the Netherland­s have shown considerab­le support for implementi­ng 3-NOP.”

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