Clinic for Zoo Animals, Exotic Pets and Wildlife, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstr. 260, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol. 2011 Jan;158(1):177-81. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2010.10.019. Epub 2010 Oct 30.
It is assumed that small herbivores produce negligible amounts of methane, but it is unclear whether this is a physiological peculiarity or simply a scaling effect. A respiratory chamber experiment was conducted with six rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus, 1.57±0.31 kg body mass) and six guinea pigs (Cavia porcellus, 0.79±0.07 kg) offered grass hay ad libitum. Daily dry matter (DM) intake and DM digestibility were 50±6 g kg⁻⁰·⁷⁵ d⁻¹ and 55±6% in rabbits and 59±11 g kg⁻⁰·⁷⁵ d⁻¹ and 61±3% in guinea pigs, respectively. Methane production was similar for both species (0.20±0.10 L d⁻¹ and 0.22±0.08L d⁻¹ and represented 0.69±0.32 and 1.03±0.29% of gross energy intake in rabbits and guinea pigs, respectively. In relation to body mass (BM) guinea pigs produced significantly more methane. The data on methane per unit of BM obtained in this study and from the literature on the methane output of elephant, wallabies and hyraxes all lay close to a regression line derived from roughage-fed horses, showing an increase in methane output with BM. The regression, including all data, was nearly identical to that based on the horse data only (methane production in horses [L d⁻¹]=0.18 BM [kg]⁰·⁹⁷(⁹⁵%CI ⁰·⁹²⁻¹·⁰²)) and indicates linear scaling. Because feed intake typically scales to BM⁰·⁷⁵, linear scaling of methane output translates into increasing energetic losses at increasing BM. Accordingly, the data collection indicates that an increasing proportion of ingested gross energy is lost because relative methane production increases with BM. Different from ruminants, such losses (1%-2% of gross energy) appear too small in non-ruminant herbivores to represent a physiologic constraint on body size. Nevertheless, this relationship may represent a physiological disadvantage with increasing herbivore body size.
据假设,小型食草动物产生的甲烷含量可以忽略不计,但目前尚不清楚这是一种生理特性还是仅仅是一种规模效应。本研究采用呼吸室实验,选用 6 只兔子(体重 1.57±0.31kg)和 6 只豚鼠(体重 0.79±0.07kg),自由采食干草。兔子的日干物质(DM)摄入量和 DM 消化率分别为 50±6gkg⁻⁰·⁷⁵d⁻¹和 55±6%,豚鼠分别为 59±11gkg⁻⁰·⁷⁵d⁻¹和 61±3%。两种动物的甲烷产量相似(0.20±0.10Ld⁻¹和 0.22±0.08Ld⁻¹,分别占兔子和豚鼠总能摄入量的 0.69±0.32%和 1.03±0.29%)。与体重(BM)相比,豚鼠产生的甲烷显著更多。本研究和有关大象、沙袋鼠和岩蹄兔甲烷排放量的文献中获得的单位 BM 甲烷数据都接近从粗饲料喂养的马得出的回归线,表明随着 BM 的增加,甲烷排放量增加。包括所有数据的回归与仅基于马数据的回归几乎相同(马的甲烷产量[Ld⁻¹]=0.18BM[kg]⁰·⁹⁷(95%置信区间为 0.92-1.02)),表明呈线性比例。由于采食量通常按 BM⁰·⁷⁵比例缩放,因此甲烷产量的线性比例意味着随着 BM 的增加,能量损失增加。因此,数据收集表明,由于相对甲烷产量随着 BM 的增加而增加,摄入的总能量中有越来越大的比例被浪费。与反刍动物不同,非反刍食草动物的这种损失(占总能量的 1%-2%)太小,不会对体型构成生理限制。然而,随着食草动物体型的增加,这种关系可能代表一种生理劣势。