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The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming

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The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming. / Slade, Eleanor Margaret; Riutta, Terhi; Roslin, Tomas et al.
In: Scientific Reports, Vol. 6, 18140, 05.01.2016.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Slade, EM, Riutta, T, Roslin, T & Tuomisto, H 2016, 'The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming', Scientific Reports, vol. 6, 18140. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep18140

APA

Slade, E. M., Riutta, T., Roslin, T., & Tuomisto, H. (2016). The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming. Scientific Reports, 6, Article 18140. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep18140

Vancouver

Slade EM, Riutta T, Roslin T, Tuomisto H. The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming. Scientific Reports. 2016 Jan 5;6:18140. doi: 10.1038/srep18140

Author

Slade, Eleanor Margaret ; Riutta, Terhi ; Roslin, Tomas et al. / The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming. In: Scientific Reports. 2016 ; Vol. 6.

Bibtex

@article{51d83d68dee44c51b1b2d1f49c8ef349,
title = "The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming",
abstract = "Agriculture is one of the largest anthropogenic sources of greenhouse gases (GHGs), with dairy and beef production accounting for nearly two-thirds of emissions. Several recent papers suggest that dung beetles may affect fluxes of GHGs from cattle farming. Here, we put these previous findings into context. Using Finland as an example, we assessed GHG emissions at three scales: the dung pat, pasture ecosystem, and whole lifecycle of milk or beef production. At the first two levels, dung beetles reduced GHG emissions by up to 7% and 12% respectively, mainly through large reductions in methane (CH4) emissions. However, at the lifecycle level, dung beetles accounted for only a 0.05–0.13% reduction of overall GHG emissions. This mismatch derives from the fact that in intensive production systems, only a limited fraction of all cow pats end up on pastures, offering limited scope for dung beetle mitigation of GHG fluxes. In contrast, we suggest that the effects of dung beetles may be accentuated in tropical countries, where more manure is left on pastures, and dung beetles remove and aerate dung faster, and that this is thus a key area for future research. These considerations give a new perspective on previous results, and suggest that studies of biotic effects on GHG emissions from dung pats on a global scale are a priority for current research.",
author = "Slade, {Eleanor Margaret} and Terhi Riutta and Tomas Roslin and Hanna Tuomisto",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1038/srep18140",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "Nature Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The role of dung beetles in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from cattle farming

AU - Slade, Eleanor Margaret

AU - Riutta, Terhi

AU - Roslin, Tomas

AU - Tuomisto, Hanna

PY - 2016/1/5

Y1 - 2016/1/5

N2 - Agriculture is one of the largest anthropogenic sources of greenhouse gases (GHGs), with dairy and beef production accounting for nearly two-thirds of emissions. Several recent papers suggest that dung beetles may affect fluxes of GHGs from cattle farming. Here, we put these previous findings into context. Using Finland as an example, we assessed GHG emissions at three scales: the dung pat, pasture ecosystem, and whole lifecycle of milk or beef production. At the first two levels, dung beetles reduced GHG emissions by up to 7% and 12% respectively, mainly through large reductions in methane (CH4) emissions. However, at the lifecycle level, dung beetles accounted for only a 0.05–0.13% reduction of overall GHG emissions. This mismatch derives from the fact that in intensive production systems, only a limited fraction of all cow pats end up on pastures, offering limited scope for dung beetle mitigation of GHG fluxes. In contrast, we suggest that the effects of dung beetles may be accentuated in tropical countries, where more manure is left on pastures, and dung beetles remove and aerate dung faster, and that this is thus a key area for future research. These considerations give a new perspective on previous results, and suggest that studies of biotic effects on GHG emissions from dung pats on a global scale are a priority for current research.

AB - Agriculture is one of the largest anthropogenic sources of greenhouse gases (GHGs), with dairy and beef production accounting for nearly two-thirds of emissions. Several recent papers suggest that dung beetles may affect fluxes of GHGs from cattle farming. Here, we put these previous findings into context. Using Finland as an example, we assessed GHG emissions at three scales: the dung pat, pasture ecosystem, and whole lifecycle of milk or beef production. At the first two levels, dung beetles reduced GHG emissions by up to 7% and 12% respectively, mainly through large reductions in methane (CH4) emissions. However, at the lifecycle level, dung beetles accounted for only a 0.05–0.13% reduction of overall GHG emissions. This mismatch derives from the fact that in intensive production systems, only a limited fraction of all cow pats end up on pastures, offering limited scope for dung beetle mitigation of GHG fluxes. In contrast, we suggest that the effects of dung beetles may be accentuated in tropical countries, where more manure is left on pastures, and dung beetles remove and aerate dung faster, and that this is thus a key area for future research. These considerations give a new perspective on previous results, and suggest that studies of biotic effects on GHG emissions from dung pats on a global scale are a priority for current research.

U2 - 10.1038/srep18140

DO - 10.1038/srep18140

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

M1 - 18140

ER -