Impact of Blood Metabolic Profile and Ingestive Behaviours Registered with Noseband Sensor on Methane Emission During Transition Period in Dairy Cows
Justina Krištolaitytė, Karina Džermeikaitė, Arūnas Rutkauskas, Greta Šertvytytė, Gabija Lembovičiūtė, Samanta Arlauskaitė, Akvilė Girdauskaitė, Violeta Juškienė, Remigijus Juška, Walter Baumgartner, Ramūnas Antanaitis

TL;DR
This study explores how blood metabolism and feeding behaviors in dairy cows affect methane emissions during the transition period around calving.
Contribution
The study reveals new correlations between methane emissions and physiological and behavioral parameters in dairy cows during the transition period.
Findings
Methane emissions were positively correlated with drinking time and negatively with chews per minute during the prepartum period.
Post-calving methane emissions correlated positively with haematocrit and negatively with haemoglobin.
Despite rumination differences, methane emissions did not vary significantly among low, medium, and high rumination groups.
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between methane emissions and physiological, behavioural, and haematological parameters in dairy cows during the transition period. Methane emissions were monitored alongside variations in rumination, feeding behaviour, and blood markers three weeks before calving, on calving day, and three weeks post-calving. Cows were retrospectively classified into low, medium, and high rumination groups according to their average daily rumination duration to investigate the effects of behavioural influences. During the prepartum period, the methane concentration was moderately positively correlated with drinking time (r = 0.41, p < 0.01) and weakly negatively correlated with chews per minute (r = −0.358, p < 0.05). Significant negative correlations were noted with chloride (r = −0.42, p < 0.01) and glucose levels (r = −0.41, p < 0.01). Following calving,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEffects of Environmental Stressors on Livestock · Reproductive Physiology in Livestock · Agriculture and Farm Safety
