1965
DOI: 10.1079/bjn19650046
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Prediction of the amount of methane produced by ruminants

Abstract: Metabolizable energy is defined as the heat of combustion of a feed less the heat of combustion of the faeces, urine and gases which are produced when it is eaten. The losses of energy in faeces and urine can be determined easily in sheep and cattle kept in metabolism cages, but to determine the energy they lose as combustible gas, that is as methane, involves quantitative measurement of the gaseous exchange and the use of much more complex and expensive equipment. During the course of calorimetric experiments… Show more

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Cited by 795 publications
(566 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…For steers, equations for GEL and DL were the same (S-GEL = S-DL). Models reported by Bratzler and Forbes (1940), Blaxter and Clapperton (1965), Jentsch et al (2007), Kebreab et al Evaluation of methane equations for beef cattle (2009), Alemu et al (2011, Ramin and Huhtanen (2013) were not evaluated because the information needed for these equations was not provided in most of the papers.…”
Section: Extant Prediction Equationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For steers, equations for GEL and DL were the same (S-GEL = S-DL). Models reported by Bratzler and Forbes (1940), Blaxter and Clapperton (1965), Jentsch et al (2007), Kebreab et al Evaluation of methane equations for beef cattle (2009), Alemu et al (2011, Ramin and Huhtanen (2013) were not evaluated because the information needed for these equations was not provided in most of the papers.…”
Section: Extant Prediction Equationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on methane was common in the 1960s when various ruminant researchers tried to decrease methane production as a means of achieving increased feed conversion ratios (unit of feed in : unit of product out), since eructation of methane represents a loss of energy to the animal. Both the amount of digestible nutrients ingested and the composition of the diet were found to be major factors governing methane production (Blaxter and Clapperton, 1965). More recently, equations have been developed by Yates et al (2000).…”
Section: Gill Smith and Wilkinsonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Representative samples of fresh urine were also analysed for GE concentration. ME concentration was then calculated using the equations of the Agriculture and Food Research Council (AFRC, 1993) and assumed methane energy output was equivalent to 0.06 3 GE intake (Blaxter and Clapperton, 1965).…”
Section: Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%