Purdue roadmap for sustainable ruminant production
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Purdue roadmap for sustainable ruminant production

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Purdue roadmap for sustainable ruminant production

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Researchers at Purdue University have published a literature review laying out a roadmap for more sustainable ruminant production, stressing links between environmental goals, animal welfare and farm productivity. The team synthesized findings from 200+ publications reviewed and highlights that livestock systems are a significant source of emissions, accounting for about 18% of emissions globally while supplying critical food resources. The paper appears in the journal Agriculture and was featured on the cover of a special issue on environmental threats to farm animals.

Purdue’s lead author, Hinayah Rojas de Oliveira, said the review finds no single approach will solve sustainability challenges and that combined strategies are needed across disciplines. The researchers emphasize coordinated gains from genetics, nutrition, microbiome science, herd management and engineering solutions to reduce greenhouse gases and other environmental impacts. They also present options that are directly actionable for producers, and provide evidence to inform policymakers and industry investment decisions.

The review draws attention to rising demand for animal products and the pressure that creates on land, water and greenhouse gas goals; ruminant sector growth is 70% projected growth by mid-century in global estimates cited by the authors. The paper highlights how host genetics can shape the rumen microbiome — the microbial community that drives fiber digestion and methane production — and how that relationship opens breeding pathways to lower emissions and improve feed conversion.

Research directions

The authors outline research areas where gains look most attainable: selective breeding for animals that transmit beneficial microbiomes, nutrition strategies that alter fermentation and reduce methane, and management practices that cut runoff and water use. Feed efficiency is a central focus because feed is the largest operating cost on many farms and is tightly linked to both emissions and land use. Any improvements in conversion of feed to meat or milk would deliver environmental and economic benefits concurrently.

Advances in sensor technology and data processing are another major theme; on-animal and barn sensors, combined with AI, can generate the precision data needed to apply genetics, nutrition and management at scale. The review showcases emerging commercial monitoring equipment and calls for stronger integration of engineering solutions with animal science. The authors recommend research designs that test technologies on working farms to ensure practical adoption.

The paper was prepared by an interdisciplinary Purdue team that includes graduate student Yufeng Shang; assistant professors Tingting Ju and Upinder Kaur; postdoctoral researcher Henrique Mulim-McCarthy; associate professors Jacquelyn Boerman and Shweta Singh; and others from the departments of Animal Sciences and Agricultural and Biological Engineering. The team stresses that involving farmers as co-participants in trials will speed adoption of useful innovations.

Policy and funding

The review argues that meeting national and international emission-reduction commitments will require integrated efforts across genetics, nutrition, monitoring technology and management, plus policies that support research translation to farms. The work was supported by Purdue’s Elevating the Visibility of Research Initiative, and the review was published in Agriculture and featured on that journal’s special-issue cover.

Photo - eu-images.contentstack.com

Sujets: Research & Development, Cattle, Sustainable agriculture

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