Relationship Between Methane Emissions and Intestinal Methanogenic Microbiota in Micro‐Mini Pigs
Maki Hirata, Eiko Nakashima, Iori Suenaga, Fumiki Morimatsu

TL;DR
This study explores methane emissions in pigs and links them to specific gut microbes, finding Methanobrevibacter is a key player.
Contribution
A new GHG monitoring system for pigs and a link between Methanobrevibacter abundance and methane production is established.
Findings
Methanobrevibacter dominates the intestinal microbiota of micro-mini pigs.
Methane production is correlated with Methanobrevibacter abundance, not body weight.
GHG monitoring system successfully links microbiota composition to methane emissions.
Abstract
Methane production in pigs has been less frequently studied in comparison to cattle. In this study, we developed an original greenhouse gas (GHG) monitoring system designed for pigs and explored the relationship between GHG emissions measured using this system and methane‐producing archaea in the porcine gut. The system comprises a semi‐closed monitoring chamber and a photoacoustic gas monitor capable of real‐time gas concentration monitoring. A gut microbiota analysis was conducted in parallel with the GHG measurements. Microbiota analysis revealed that the genus Methanobrevibacter dominated the intestinal microbiota of micro‐mini pigs, followed by the family Methanomethylophilaceae and genus Methanosphaera. Analysis of GHG emissions indicated that carbon dioxide emissions were correlated with body weight, while methane production was not associated with body weight, but rather with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Anaerobic Digestion and Biogas Production · Agriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact
