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Willow silvopastoral systems as a strategy to reduce methane emissions while maintaining cattle performance

Thompson, J., Stergiadis, S. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7293-182X, Cristobal Carballo, O., Zeller, W., Yan, T., Lively, F., Gilliland, J., Purusottam, R., Huws, S. and Theodoridou, K. (2025) Willow silvopastoral systems as a strategy to reduce methane emissions while maintaining cattle performance. Scientific Reports. ISSN 2045-2322 (In Press)

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Abstract/Summary

Willow (Salix sp.) is a common tree used in agroforestry for biofuel production and contains condensed tannins (CTs). This study investigated, for the first time, the feasibility of using willow grazing in a silvopastoral system to improve ruminant productivity while minimizing environmental impact. The specific objectives were to: a) characterise willow’s CTs, and b) explore their effect on methane emissions and animal performance. Twenty growing castrated beef cattle (steers) were used in a two-treatment study comparing grazing systems: a willow fodder mix with a grass understory (WFG) and perennial ryegrass grazing (PRG). The study was conducted using a two-period Latin square design. Steers grazing on WFG had an average daily CT intake of 617 g/d. For CTs, the mean degree of polymerisation was 10.6, and the ratio of procyanidin to prodelphinidin was 28.9:71.2. No significant differences were observed between the two treatments in metabolisable energy intake (P=0.0728), nitrogen intake (P=0.844), forage dry matter intake (P=0.100), or total dry matter intake (P=0.0591). A 27% reduction in methane production was observed for the WFG treatment relative to PRG (P<0.001; 173 vs. 273 g/d). This study is the first to provide evidence of the significant potential that willow could have in sustainable livestock production systems worldwide.

Item Type:Article
Refereed:Yes
Divisions:Life Sciences > School of Agriculture, Policy and Development > Department of Animal Sciences
ID Code:122764
Publisher:Nature Publishing Group

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