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Academic Year 2024-2025
Email a.gilmartin.24@abdn.ac.uk
Institution University of Aberdeen

Biography

School: School of Biological Sciences

Pronouns: she/her

Project: Investigating approaches in dairy farming towards mitigation of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions: atmospheric concentrations, nutrient utilisation and indices of milk production as factors in prediction

Supervisors: Dr Catherine Hambly, Prof Hugh Galbraith, Dr Katerina Theodoridou, Prof Sharon Huws & Dr Sharon Mitchell

Undergraduate Education: BSc Animal Science, University of Nottingham

Postgraduate Education: MSc Animal Nutrition, University of Nottingham

Research: GHG gas emissions, particularly methane (CH4), carbon dioxide (CO2), and nitrous oxide     (N2O) from ruminant livestock, contribute significantly to global warming. In the UK, the agrifood system produces approximately 23% of emissions. Dairy cattle have a great environmental impact as methane is         released directly from digestive feed, and decomposing manure creates CH4, NO2 and ammonia.

Approaches to mitigating the production of GHGs by agricultural animals are recognised as multifactorial (e.g. Cool Farm Tool). Still, information on the success of current practices in contemporary livestock production is limited. Such strategies include selected cattle genetics; feed additives (e.g. Rumitech®, Maxammon, Monensin); altering dietary forage to concentrate ratios (starch-based; cellulosic/non-starch polysaccharide); low or high input systems; and the extent to which nitrogen-containing excreta is captured as fertiliser in crops for animal feeds in a “circular” system.

To address this critical environmental issue, nutritional practices to mitigate enteric and excreted GHG emissions from cattle in different farming systems are required. I will investigate such practices across dairy farms and determine how outcomes (cow health, digestive efficiency, and milk indices) are associated with GHG emissions by both individual animals and collectively in the farm atmosphere.

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