Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya

Livestock production in Kenya is a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions, particularly methane (CH4) from enteric fermentation. The objective of the study was to estimate enteric methane (CH4) emission factors (EFs, kg CH4/head/year) for rangeland cattle in Kenya. The study utilized the Int...

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Main Authors: Gurmu, Endale Balcha, Kiprotich, Linus, Kagai, Jesse, Solomon, A., Leitner, Sonja, Marquardt, Svenja, Merbold, Lutz, Ndungu, P.W., Arndt, Claudia
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Frontiers Media 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176055
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author Gurmu, Endale Balcha
Kiprotich, Linus
Kagai, Jesse
Solomon, A.
Leitner, Sonja
Marquardt, Svenja
Merbold, Lutz
Ndungu, P.W.
Arndt, Claudia
author_browse Arndt, Claudia
Gurmu, Endale Balcha
Kagai, Jesse
Kiprotich, Linus
Leitner, Sonja
Marquardt, Svenja
Merbold, Lutz
Ndungu, P.W.
Solomon, A.
author_facet Gurmu, Endale Balcha
Kiprotich, Linus
Kagai, Jesse
Solomon, A.
Leitner, Sonja
Marquardt, Svenja
Merbold, Lutz
Ndungu, P.W.
Arndt, Claudia
author_sort Gurmu, Endale Balcha
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Livestock production in Kenya is a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions, particularly methane (CH4) from enteric fermentation. The objective of the study was to estimate enteric methane (CH4) emission factors (EFs, kg CH4/head/year) for rangeland cattle in Kenya. The study utilized the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Tier 2 method, incorporating animal characteristics, performance data, and diet digestibility. Data were obtained from 1,486 cattle across three locations in Kenya’s pastoral areas: Kapiti Research Station and Wildlife Conservancy (815 cattle), Olkirimatian Community Ranch (347 cattle), and Shompole Community Ranch (324 cattle) all located in southern Kenya. Animal activity data were collected for four seasons during 1 year at Kapiti, and one dry and one wet season in Olkirimatian and Shompole. The EFs were estimated for wet and dry seasons, allowing the calculation of mean annual EFs. The EFs were calculated for the different cattle categories: adult females and males (≥3 years), young males and females (1–3 years) and calves (<1 year). The results revealed significant differences in herd composition, live weight (LW), weight gains, milk yield, and digestible energy (DE) of pasture among the locations, all of which influence CH4 emissions. LW varied among the three locations due to differences in breed between sites and varied substantially compared to Tier 1 assumptions, and DE differed significantly across sites (54.5%–66.4%), despite the Tier 1 approach assuming a fixed DE value for pasture (58%). There was a significant difference (p < 0.05) in the herd level EF of all cattle categories: Kapiti (64 ± 0.9 kg CH4/head/year), followed by Olkirimatian (52 ± 1.2 kg CH4/head/year) and Shompole (42 ± 1.0 kg CH4/head/year). A comparison of the estimated herd level Tier 2 EFs with computed herd level Tier 1 values revealed that Kapiti exhibited 18% higher mean Tier 2 EFs, while it was lower by 7% and 28% in Olkirimatian and Shompole, respectively. These findings highlight the need for system-specific national EFs that better capture the diversity of production systems and breed differences. Policymakers and researchers should revise IPCC default values to incorporate breed-specific factors within systems.
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spelling CGSpace1760552025-12-08T10:29:22Z Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya Gurmu, Endale Balcha Kiprotich, Linus Kagai, Jesse Solomon, A. Leitner, Sonja Marquardt, Svenja Merbold, Lutz Ndungu, P.W. Arndt, Claudia pastoralism environment livestock Livestock production in Kenya is a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions, particularly methane (CH4) from enteric fermentation. The objective of the study was to estimate enteric methane (CH4) emission factors (EFs, kg CH4/head/year) for rangeland cattle in Kenya. The study utilized the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Tier 2 method, incorporating animal characteristics, performance data, and diet digestibility. Data were obtained from 1,486 cattle across three locations in Kenya’s pastoral areas: Kapiti Research Station and Wildlife Conservancy (815 cattle), Olkirimatian Community Ranch (347 cattle), and Shompole Community Ranch (324 cattle) all located in southern Kenya. Animal activity data were collected for four seasons during 1 year at Kapiti, and one dry and one wet season in Olkirimatian and Shompole. The EFs were estimated for wet and dry seasons, allowing the calculation of mean annual EFs. The EFs were calculated for the different cattle categories: adult females and males (≥3 years), young males and females (1–3 years) and calves (<1 year). The results revealed significant differences in herd composition, live weight (LW), weight gains, milk yield, and digestible energy (DE) of pasture among the locations, all of which influence CH4 emissions. LW varied among the three locations due to differences in breed between sites and varied substantially compared to Tier 1 assumptions, and DE differed significantly across sites (54.5%–66.4%), despite the Tier 1 approach assuming a fixed DE value for pasture (58%). There was a significant difference (p < 0.05) in the herd level EF of all cattle categories: Kapiti (64 ± 0.9 kg CH4/head/year), followed by Olkirimatian (52 ± 1.2 kg CH4/head/year) and Shompole (42 ± 1.0 kg CH4/head/year). A comparison of the estimated herd level Tier 2 EFs with computed herd level Tier 1 values revealed that Kapiti exhibited 18% higher mean Tier 2 EFs, while it was lower by 7% and 28% in Olkirimatian and Shompole, respectively. These findings highlight the need for system-specific national EFs that better capture the diversity of production systems and breed differences. Policymakers and researchers should revise IPCC default values to incorporate breed-specific factors within systems. 2025-07-02 2025-08-09T11:57:42Z 2025-08-09T11:57:42Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176055 en Open Access Frontiers Media Gurmu, E.B., Kiprotich, L.E., Kagai, J.G., Solomon, A., Leitner, S., Marquardt, S., Merbold, L., Ndungu, P.W. and Arndt, C. 2025. Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya. Pastoralism 15:14566.
spellingShingle pastoralism
environment
livestock
Gurmu, Endale Balcha
Kiprotich, Linus
Kagai, Jesse
Solomon, A.
Leitner, Sonja
Marquardt, Svenja
Merbold, Lutz
Ndungu, P.W.
Arndt, Claudia
Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya
title Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya
title_full Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya
title_fullStr Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya
title_short Beyond default estimates: developing system-specific Tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in Kenya
title_sort beyond default estimates developing system specific tier 2 enteric methane emission factors for rangeland cattle in kenya
topic pastoralism
environment
livestock
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176055
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