Subscribe to the Angus Beef Bulletin

Subscribe to the
newly redesigned
Angus Beef Bulletin

by clicking the
image above.


Sign up!

Quick links:

Share the EXTRA

Connect with
our community:

Follow us on twitterJoin us on Twitter















































































Bookmark and Share

Measuring Greenhouse Gasses

Ken Casey, Texas A&M AgriLife Research air quality engineer in Amarillo, collects a greenhouse gas sample from a static flux chamber.

Measuring Up

Feedyard greenhouse gas study analyzes emissions, mitigation factors.

A week spent in a feedyard pen is helping researchers gain a better understanding of greenhouse gas emissions. Their goal is to improve the national inventory of greenhouse gases and determine potential mitigation measures.


Texas A&M AgriLife Research and USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) are collaborating to analyze nitrous oxide and methane emissions from an area feedyard pen.


Sampling chambers

Automated greenhouse gas sampling chambers were set up in a Texas Panhandle feedyard.

Ken Casey, AgriLife Research air quality engineer in Amarillo, and David Parker and Heidi Waldrip, USDA ARS livestock nutrient management researchers at Bushland, spent the better part of a week sitting inside a feedyard pen just vacated by cattle.


The project is funded by USDA ARS and AgriLife Research, with instrumentation used in the study partly supported by the Texas Cattle Feeders Association (TCFA).


Using six automated chambers, more than 575 automated flux measurements were taken, as were 60 manual flux measurements from separate static chambers, to help monitor nitrous oxide and methane gas emissions. Halfway through the experiment, a half-inch of water was applied to the pen surface within the measurement chamber bases to simulate a rainfall.


“We’re looking to understand better what controls nitrous oxide and methane coming off feedlot pen surfaces,” Casey said. “We’re interested in the emissions of these gases because of their contribution to climate change. We want to improve the national emissions inventories as they pertain to greenhouse gases from feedyards in the Texas High Plains.


“Secondly, we are also very interested in obtaining a better mechanistic understanding of the evolution of these gases from the pen surfaces,” he continues. “What controls the release of these gases? If we are able to gain a better understanding of that, then we will potentially be able to provide advice to the industry about mitigation practices when it comes to pen management.”


Ken Casey and David Parker

AgriLife Research’s Ken Casey, standing, and USDA ARS’s David Parker review data collected by the automatic samplers in the air quality trailer, which is equipped with continuous flow analyzers and a multiplexer controlling the automated chambers.

Casey said their testing demonstrated areas of the pen with shallower manure packs on the surface primarily emitted nitrous oxide, while two chambers sitting over deeper manure where the pen drain was located emitted almost no nitrous oxide, but were emitting methane.


“We are trying to understand the interplay of those two gases, because the processes that are producing them are related,” he said.


The different factors that influence the creation and release of the gases include temperature, moisture content and the amount of manure on the pen surface, Casey said.


“By understanding how those factors play together in the production of those gases, we can develop a greater understanding and potentially develop mitigation strategies,” he said.


“However, it’s complicated, because a strategy that reduces one emission may in fact increase the other. So our understanding of the production of these gases and the environmental factors that influence them are important.”


During the study, gas samples were collected twice a day from the static chambers and then taken to Casey’s air-quality lab to be analyzed on a gas chromatograph. Six automated chambers took measurements each hour, around the clock. The automated chambers were linked through a multiplexer to automated nitrous oxide and methane analyzers.


“We know emissions are influenced by temperature, and by taking diurnal measurements we can understand the variability throughout the day and night, as well as that of the effects of moisture.”


The week of measurements is only part of ongoing research being conducted by Casey and Parker. Casey said the results will be reported to the industry, as well as in various journals along the way, and will be used for extended air quality research. Parker said their research is also relevant to manure quality.


“Not only is this research important for greenhouse gas emissions, but through this and ongoing laboratory studies, we are learning more about nutrient transformations and water losses from the feedyard surface,” he said.


comment on this story

Editor’s Note: Kay Ledbetter is a communications specialist with Texas AgriLife Extension Service.



 

 

 

 

 

 





Use this keyword search to find more articles like this one:


[Click here to go to the top of the page.]