Waste and Odor
Digestive Microbes Could Help Lower Methane Gas From Livestock

Globally, livestock are the largest source of methane from human-related  activities, and are the third-largest source of this greenhouse gas in  the United States, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency. 
Wallabies and other marsupials -- mammals like the kangaroo that develop  their offspring in a pouch -- are dependent on microbes to support  their digestive system, similar to livestock such as cows, sheep and  goats, but Tammar wallabies are known to release about 80 per cent less  methane gas per unit of digestible energy intake than do livestock  animals. 
Scientists have used DNA sequence data to devise a way to isolate and  grow cultures of a dominant bacterial species from the Tammar wallaby  gut and test its characteristics. The analysis confirmed that this  bacterium would contribute to a digestion process that produces low  levels of methane. Using this information, scientists hope to devise a  way to augment the microbial mix in livestock animals’ digestive systems  and therefore reduce their methane emissions. 
An added bonus for the wallabies, the researchers say, is that the  presence of this bacterium frees up more digestible energy for  nutritional purposes in host animals. The energy the fermentation  process uses to produce methane gas during digestion actually robs  animals of some of the nutritional quality of their food. 
“Our long-term goals are really to improve nutrient retention by  livestock, and reducing methane emissions is just one area where we seek  to have a positive impact, both on animal productivity and the  environment,” said Mark Morrison, senior author of the study and a  professor of animal sciences at Ohio State University. Morrison has an  appointment with the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center  (OARDC) and is also the science leader in metagenomics for CSIRO  (Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organization)  Division of Livestock Industries based in Brisbane, Australia. 
The study is in press in the journal Science and appeared online as a Science Express report on June 30, 2011. 
Marsupials are often considered similar to ruminants -- a class of  mammals that have multiple compartments, including one called a rumen,  in their stomachs -- because both groups have a digestive system that  supports a “pre-digestion” of food by microbes, to process their  plant-based diets. And this process, which includes a period of  fermentation to break down the foods and release nutrients, causes the  animals to discharge methane gas. 
Early research in this area showed that methane emissions from Tammar  wallabies amount to 1 to 2 per cent of their digestible energy intake,  compared to methane emissions of roughly 10 per cent of digestible  energy intake in sheep. In addition, marsupial and ruminant gut  anatomies differ, which influences how quickly food moves through the  digestive system. 
Over time, however, researchers have noted that Tammar wallabies in  particular produce only about a fifth of the amount of methane produced  by livestock ruminants as a result of differences in anatomy and  microbial compositions in their guts. 
Early research in this area showed that methane emissions from Tammar  wallabies amount to 1 to 2 per cent of their digestible energy intake,  compared to methane emissions of roughly 10 per cent of digestible  energy intake in sheep. In addition, marsupial and ruminant gut  anatomies differ, which influences how quickly food moves through the  digestive system. 
Morrison and his colleagues at CSIRO and the University of Queensland  have previously shown that marsupials have fewer methane-producing  microbes in their guts than do ruminants, and that certain bacteria in  marsupial guts might use up hydrogen and carbon dioxide that normally  would be used by methane-producing microbes to grow. 
Last year, Morrison and colleagues reported that there were key  bacterial and enzyme-based differences between the gut contents of  Tammar wallabies and other herbivores, including cows. The scientists  are employing metagenomics, the application of DNA sequencing of  organisms and computational methods to study entire communities of  microbes. 
From that complex microbial community of roughly 500 bacterial species  in the Tammar wallaby gut, the researchers determined that one of the  dominant bacteria there belonged to the Succinivibrionaceae family. The  researchers were able to isolate and grow this bacterium, called WG-1,  in culture to test and confirm its properties. It produces succinate as a  main end product of fermentation -- not one of the usual end products  associated with higher methane production. 
“There are also Succinivibrionaceae in the rumen; however, there has not  been a lot of focus on those bacteria, especially from the context that  they might contribute in any way to a reduction in methane production,”  Morrison said. “Our findings with the Tammar wallaby were a bit of a  surprise, but we think they provide an important clue for how rumen  fermentation might be directed away from methane formation.” 
Much more analysis will be needed, he noted. Now that the researchers  have isolated and grown WG-1 in culture, they want to isolate bacteria  in livestock digestive systems that are probable distant relatives to  the wallaby bacteria. Better understanding of how these target bacteria  behave should help researchers figure out how to increase their numbers  and their contributions to livestock digestion, Morrison said.  
“We hope that in the next few years, in addition to there being  strategies that inhibit the abundance of methane-producing microbes in  livestock, we will have identified how to augment the growth of other  bacteria so that feed digestion and fermentation remain optimal but also  are accompanied by reduced methane emissions,” he said. 
This work is supported by CSIRO’s Office of the Chief Executive (OCE)  Science Leader and Transformational Biology Capability Platform grant  programs, a CSIRO OCE Postdoctoral Fellowship and the US Department of  Energy Joint Genome InstituteCommunity Sequencing Program.














