Methane emissions from bison-An historic herd estimate for the North American Great Plains
Abstract
Enteric methane (CH 4) emissions were estimated from 30 M bison (Bison bison) across the North American Great Plains before contact with European settlers. We compiled the first historic emissions inventory using an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Tier 2 method. The emissions were governed by the energy requirements for grazing, growth and reproduction. A sex/age distribution accounted for the net effect of births, development and deaths. The CH 4 yield was based on calorimeter measurements. The average bison's weight, feed (dry matter, DM) intake and emissions were 411 kg, 3.4 t DM head -1 year -1 and 72 kg CH 4 head -1 year -1, respectively. The historic herd's emissions were 2.2 Tg CH 4 year -1. On 1 January 2008, 36.5 M cattle were located in 10 American states occupying the historic bison range. Cattle emissions were 2.5 Tg CH 4 year -1, estimated using an IPCC Tier 1 method, adjusted by comparison with a mechanistic model and food gathering energy required by 77% of the cattle fed by grazing.
- Publication:
-
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
- Pub Date:
- 2010
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2010AgFM..150..473K
- Keywords:
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- Ruminant;
- Energy requirement;
- Scaling;
- Anthropogenic