Bovine air quality measurement

Posted by Richard Bennett

You never know how much of a thing you have until you measure it:

DAVIS, Calif. – In a white, tent-like “bio-bubble” on a farm near Davis, eight pregnant Holsteins are eating, chewing and pooping — for science. “The ladies,” as they’re called by University of California researcher Frank Mitloehner, are doing their part to answer a question plaguing one of California’s largest agricultural industries: How much gas does a cow emit?

The findings will be used to write the state’s first air quality regulations for dairies and could affect regulations nationwide.

But before he explains how it works, Mitloehner wants one thing to be clear.

“We’re not talking about flatulence,” he says.

He emphasizes the point because his research has been dismissed as “fart science,” a label he says doesn’t do justice to the seriousness of his work.

The issue hanging in the balance is how much money dairies have to spend on air quality equipment.

2 Responses to “Bovine air quality measurement”

  1. [...] Thanks, Mr. Bennett, for the Cow Post of the Week. [...]

  2. Just what we need: a fart tax!