Analyze Diet

Topic:Methane

Methane emissions in horses are a subject of interest due to their potential impact on the environment and equine digestion. Methane is a greenhouse gas produced during the digestive process, particularly through enteric fermentation in the hindgut of horses. The production of methane is influenced by factors such as diet composition, feed intake, and the microbial population in the digestive tract. Understanding methane emissions in horses is important for evaluating their environmental footprint and improving nutritional strategies. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the production, measurement, and implications of methane emissions in horses, as well as strategies for mitigation.
Effects of processing barley on its digestion by horses.
The Veterinary record    May 27, 2008   Volume 162, Issue 21 684-688 doi: 10.1136/vr.162.21.684
Vervuert I, Voigt K, Hollands T, Cí·¯ord D, Coenen M.Four horses were randomly fed a diet containing rolled, micronised or extruded barley; the barley intake was adjusted to supply 2 g starch/kg bodyweight per day. During a 10-day acclimatisation period the horses were also fed 1 kg grass hay/100 kg bodyweight per day. Samples of blood and breath were collected at the end of each period after the test meal of barley had been fed after a 12-hour overnight fast. The glycaemic and insulinaemic responses of the horses were measured as an indication of the pre-caecal digestibility of starch, and postprandial breath hydrogen and methane were measured ...
Portable mass spectrometry for measurement of anaesthetic agents and methane in respiratory gases.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 22, 2007   Volume 177, Issue 1 36-44 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2007.03.017
Turner PG, Dugdale A, Young IS, Taylor S.Monitoring the composition of gases breathed by anaesthetised patients requires measurement methods with fast responses, high accuracy and good reliability. There is also an increasing demand for systems to be able to monitor more than one target analyte simultaneously, but some gas analysers can be sensitive to the presence of methane gas in exhaled breath, consequently leading to inaccurate measurements of the anaesthetic agent. This study investigated the feasibility of employing portable quadrupole mass spectrometry to monitor volatile anaesthetic agents (halothane, isoflurane and sevoflur...
Biogas production with horse dung in solid-phase digestion systems.
Bioresource technology    March 26, 2007   Volume 99, Issue 5 1280-1292 doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2007.02.008
Kusch S, Oechsner H, Jungbluth T.Experiments on methanogenesis from horse dung were conducted in laboratory-scale batch reactors in order to determine the substrate performance in a solid-phase digestion process, more specifically in terms of potential energy recovery and suitable process technology. Dung from a horse stable with straw bedding was used. The temperature was kept in the mesophilic range. In the percolation process (with process water sprinkled over the stacked biomass) a proportion of 10-20% of solid inoculum (pre-digested horse dung) was found to be suitable. Comparative experiments with both percolation and f...
Fermentative gases in breath indicate that inulin and starch start to be degraded by microbial fermentation in the stomach and small intestine of the horse in contrast to pectin and cellulose.
The Journal of nutrition    June 15, 2006   Volume 136, Issue 7 Suppl 2108S-2110S doi: 10.1093/jn/136.7.2108S
Coenen M, Mösseler A, Vervuert I.No abstract available
Isoflurane measurement error using short wavelength infrared techniques in horses: influence of fresh gas flow and pre-anaesthetic food deprivation.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    March 15, 2005   Volume 32, Issue 2 101-106 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2004.00185.x
Dujardin CL, Gootjes P, Moens Y.To quantify the isoflurane measurement error arising from the use of short wavelength infrared (IR) anaesthetic gas analysis during low flow anaesthesia in horses. Methods: Prospective clinical study. Methods: Sixty-four client-owned horses referred for elective or emergency surgery (age 1-16 years, body mass 400-650 kg). Methods: Horses were divided into four groups based on duration of pre-anaesthetic food deprivation period (FDP) and fresh gas flow during anaesthesia: a high flow group with normal FDP (n = 16) and three groups with low flow and normal (n = 29), long (n = 5) or no (n = 14) F...
Description of Methanobrevibacter gottschalkii sp. nov., Methanobrevibacter thaueri sp. nov., Methanobrevibacter woesei sp. nov. and Methanobrevibacter wolinii sp. nov.
International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology    June 11, 2002   Volume 52, Issue Pt 3 819-822 doi: 10.1099/00207713-52-3-819
Miller TL, Lin C.Formal nomenclature is proposed for five methanogens, isolated from horse, pig, cow, goose and sheep faeces, that represent four novel species of the genus Methanobrevibacter. The four species, Methanobrevibacter gottschalkii sp. nov., Methanobrevibacter thaueri sp. nov., Methanobrevibacter woesei sp. nov. and Methanobrevibacter wolinii sp. nov., are distinguished from each other by a lack of genomic DNA reassociation and from previously described members of the genus on the basis of differences in the sequences of the 16S rRNA genes.
Measurement for breath concentration of hydrogen and methane in horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 27, 1999   Volume 61, Issue 9 1059-1062 doi: 10.1292/jvms.61.1059
Sasaki N, Hobo S, Yoshihara T.This study concerns the establishment of a simple testing method for breath concentration of hydrogen and methane in horses. Twenty-eight healthy thoroughbreds and 24 Arabians were used. Breath samples were collected using one-minute closed circulatory respiration through an aluminum bag filled with 10 liters of pure oxygen, which was mounted on the subjects by means of a face mask. Breath samples obtained, were analyzed by gas chromatography. A significant correlation in both hydrogen and methane levels was observed for samples collected at separate times. These findings confirmed the usefuln...
Methanogenesis in monogastric animals.
Environmental monitoring and assessment    September 1, 1996   Volume 42, Issue 1-2 99-112 doi: 10.1007/BF00394044
Jensen BB.Studies of methanogenic bacteria present in monogastric animals are still scarce. Methanogens have been isolated from faeces of rat, horse, pig, monkey, baboon, rhinoceros, hippopotamus, giant panda, goose, turkey and chicken. The predominant methanogen in all except the chicken and turkey is species of Methanobrevibacterium. The chicken and turkey harbour species of Methanogenium. In pig the population of methanogenic bacteria is more than 30 times as dense in the distal colon as in the caecum. This finding is in agreement with the finding that the rate of methane production is much higher in...
Quantitative determination of H2-utilizing acetogenic and sulfate-reducing bacteria and methanogenic archaea from digestive tract of different mammals.
Current microbiology    March 1, 1996   Volume 32, Issue 3 129-133 doi: 10.1007/s002849900023
Morvan B, Bonnemoy F, Fonty G, Gouet P.Total number of bacteria, cellulolytic bacteria, and H2-utilizing microbial populations (methanogenic archaea, acetogenic and sulfate-reducing bacteria) were enumerated in fresh rumen samples from sheep, cattle, buffaloes, deer, llamas, and caecal samples from horses. Methanogens and sulfate reducers were found in all samples, whereas acetogenes were not detected in some samples of each animal. Archaea methanogens were the largest H2-utilizing populations in all animals, and a correlation was observed between the numbers of methanogens and those of cellulolytic microorganisms. Higher counts of...
The influence of methane on the infrared measurement of anaesthetic vapour concentration.
Anaesthesia    March 1, 1993   Volume 48, Issue 3 270 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2044.1993.tb06926.x
Moens YP, Gootjes P.No abstract available
Nitrous oxide: effect on accumulation rate and uptake of bowel gases.
Anesthesia and analgesia    September 1, 1979   Volume 58, Issue 5 405-408 doi: 10.1213/00000539-197909000-00012
Steffey EP, Johnson BH, Eger EI, Howland D.Breathing 79% nitrous oxide (N2O) in oxygen increased the rate of accumulation of bowel gas during intraluminal bowel segment infusions of hydrogen, methane (CH4), air, or carbon dioxide (CO2) in four pentobarbital-anesthetized dogs more than did breathing 100% oxygen. A N2O-associated increase in the volume of naturally produced intestinal gas in five halothane-anesthetized ponies corroborated the findings in the dog studies. In a second group of four dogs a bolus of CH4 or CO2 was injected into the bowel lumen. When the dogs breathed O2 the bowel gas volume decreased. Gas was virtually absen...