Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1147546
Título: Greenhouse gas balance and mitigation of pasture-based dairy production systems in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest Biome.
Autoria: OLIVEIRA, P. P. A.
BERNDT, A.
PEDROSO, A. de F.
ALVES, T. C.
LEMES, A. P.
OLIVEIRA, B. A.
PEZZOPANE, J. R. M.
RODRIGUES, P. H. M.
Afiliação: PATRICIA PERONDI ANCHAO OLIVEIRA, CPPSE; ALEXANDRE BERNDT, CPPSE; ANDRE DE FARIA PEDROSO, CPPSE; TERESA CRISTINA ALVES, CPPSE; AMANDA PRUDÊNCIO LEMES, Veterinary Hospital, Brazil University, Fernandópolis, Brazil.; BIA ANCHÃO OLIVEIRA, School of Agriculture and Environment, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand.; JOSE RICARDO MACEDO PEZZOPANE, CPPSE; PAULO HENRIQUE MAZZA RODRIGUES, Department of Animal Nutrition and Production, School of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science of University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Ano de publicação: 2022
Referência: Frontiers in Veterinary Science, v. 9, 958751, sep. 2022.
Páginas: 15 p.
Conteúdo: Brazilian cattle production is mostly carried out in pastures, and the need to mitigate the livestock's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and its environmental footprint has become an important requirement. The adoption of well-suited breeds and the intensification of pasture-based livestock production systems are alternatives to optimize the sector's land use. However, further research on tropical systems is necessary. The objective of this research was to evaluate the effect of Holstein (HO) and Jersey?Holstein (JE x HO) crossbred cows in different levels of pasture intensification (continuous grazing system with low stocking rate?CLS; irrigated rotational grazing system with high stocking rate?RHS), and the interaction between these two factors on GHG mitigation. Twenty-four HO and 24 JE x HO crossbred dairy cows were used to evaluate the effect of two grazing systems on milk production and composition, soil GHG emissions, methane (CH4) emission, and soil carbon accumulation (0?100 cm). These variables were used to calculate carbon balance (CB), GHG emission intensity, the number of trees required to mitigate GHG emission, and the land-saving effect. The number of trees necessary to mitigate GHG emission was calculated, considering the C balance within the farm gate. The mitigation of GHG emissions comes from the annual growth rate and accumulation of C in eucalyptus trees' trunks. The CB of all systems and genotypes presented a deficit in carbon (C); there was no difference for genotypes, but RHS was more deficient than CLS (-4.99 to CLS and ?28.72 to RHS ton CO2e..ha?1.year?1). The deficit of C on GHG emission intensity was similar between genotypes and higher for RHS (?0.480 to RHS and ?0.299 to CLS kg CO2e..kg FCPCmilk?1). Lower GHG removals (0.14 to CLS higher than 0.02 to RHS kg CO2e..kg FCPCmilk?1) had the greatest influence on the GHG emission intensity of milk production. The deficit number of trees to abatement emissions was higher to HO (?46.06 to HO and ?38.37 trees/cow to JE x HO) and to RHS (?51.9 to RHS and ?33.05 trees/cow to CLS). However, when the results are expressed per ton of FCPCmilk, there was a difference only between pasture management, requiring ?6.34 tree. ton FCPCmilk?1 for the RHS and ?3.99 tree. ton FCPCmilk?1 for the CLS system. The intensification of pastures resulted in higher milk production and land-saving effect of 2.7 ha. Due to the reservation of the pasture-based dairy systems in increasing soil C sequestration to offset the GHG emissions, especially enteric CH4, planting trees can be used as a mitigation strategy. Also, the land-save effect of intensification can contribute to the issue, since the area spared through the intensification in pasture management becomes available for reforestation with commercial trees.
NAL Thesaurus: Carbon sequestration
Eucalyptus
Palavras-chave: GHG emission intensity
Enteric methane emission
Nitrous oxide emission
Mitigation GHG emissions
ILPF
Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.958751
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CPPSE)

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