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Biotech Earth

Can We Fight Climate Change By Bioengineering a Better Cow? (msn.com) 113

One of Slashdot's most-visited stories of all time was the 2016 story asking: Can Cow Backpacks Reduce Global Methane Emissions? "Enteric fermentation," or livestock's digestive process, accounts for 22 percent of all U.S. methane emissions, and the manure they produce makes up eight percent more, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency... Methane, like carbon, is a greenhouse gas, but methane's global warming impact per molecule is 25 times greater than carbon's, according to the EPA.
Cow methane still "heats the Earth more than every flight across the world combined," the Washington Post added today, reporting on a new $30 million genetic engineering experiment undertaken by the Innovative Genomics Institute and the University of California at Davis.

Its mission: to transform a cow's gut so it no longer releases methane. Using tools that snip and transfer DNA, researchers plan to genetically engineer microbes in the cow stomach to eliminate those emissions. If they succeed, they could wipe out the world's largest human-made source of methane and help change the trajectory of planetary warming... The average cow produces around 220 pounds of methane per year, or around half the emissions of an average car; cows are currently responsible for around 4 percent of global warming, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization...

Scientists envision a kind of probiotic pill, given to the cow at birth, that can transform its microbiome permanently...

The current project doesn't target only a particular cow species — it takes aim at the microbiome itself, offering a solution that could apply to all of them. Brad Ringeisen, executive director at the genomics institute, cut his teeth running biotechnology at the U.S. defense research agency DARPA, which helped pioneer transformative innovations including the internet, miniaturized GPS, stealth aircraft and the computer mouse. "I'm taking the DARPA mentality here," he said. "Let's solve it for all cows, not just a fraction of the cows." ...]

"There's no reason a cow has to produce methane," Ringeisen said. So what if scientists could just ... turn it off?

"I personally think this is the one that can make the biggest impact in the world," Ringeisen said. "Say you could wave a magic wand and eliminate all those emissions."

The article says that currently the scientists are feeding red-seaweed oil to a cow to measure the changes, to prepare for their final goal: "replicate those changes with gene editing." (They're using machine learning to reassemble the hundreds of pieces of each miccroorganism's DNA, so they can understand which changes they need to make with their early-intervention probiotic.) Such a probiotic could also improve a farm's productivity. Cows can lose up to 12 percent of their energy through burping up methane; other ruminants, like sheep and goats, also lose energy in this way. "If there is a way to redirect that hydrogen and convert it into milk, meat, wool — it would be much more accepted by farmers," said Ermias Kebreab [a professor of animal science at UC-Davis].

Early treatments will be tested on the cows at Davis, with researchers tracking their burps to evaluate the drop-off in methane emissions. There is still a long way to go. While scientists have proved that they can gene-edit microbes, researchers have so far only shown that they can edit a small fraction of the microbes in the cow gut — or the human gut, for that matter. Institute researchers are developing microbial gene-editing tools, even as they are mapping the species of the microbiome. They are building the plane while flying it.

The teams have received enough funding for seven years of research. The project started last year, and they hope to have a trial treatment ready for testing in cows in the next two years.

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Can We Fight Climate Change By Bioengineering a Better Cow?

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  • Making cows better would be nice, too.
    • by JamesTRexx ( 675890 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @01:57PM (#64734102) Journal

      Yeah, the typical hubris of man, thinking they need the world to change for them instead of changing to fit the world themselves.
      No wonder nature tries to cull us.

      • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

        Then you can realize that there are fewer bovine animals around now than 100 years ago.

        The real problem with methane emissions is elsewhere - the use of the fossil "natural gas" is one of the major problems. It could be remedied to a large extent by not pushing it through pipes and sending it into home but instead use it directly to generate electricity.

        At the same time you'd remove one main fire hazard from many homes.

        • the use of the fossil "natural gas" is one of the major problems. It could be remedied to a large extent by not pushing it through pipes and sending it into home but instead use it directly to generate electricity.

          You'll have to pry my gas stove top from my cold dead hands....

          I like to cook, and gas is still the BEST way to cook.

          When you see pro kitchens switching to electric/induction, gimme a call....till then, I prefer to use what the pros use.

          • the use of the fossil "natural gas" is one of the major problems. It could be remedied to a large extent by not pushing it through pipes and sending it into home but instead use it directly to generate electricity.

            You'll have to pry my gas stove top from my cold dead hands....

            I like to cook, and gas is still the BEST way to cook.

            When you see pro kitchens switching to electric/induction, gimme a call....till then, I prefer to use what the pros use.

            Fire is the best way to cook and you gas latecomers are prancing about declaring your supremacy over electric while us fire users are wondering why you're so scared of soot and ash.

            • Fire is the best way to cook and you gas latecomers are prancing about declaring your supremacy over electric while us fire users are wondering why you're so scared of soot and ash.

              Well, I agree really....

              I have my wood burning offset smoker outside for BBQ as well as my lump charcoal burning Big Green Egg XL grill for most all other grilling needs.

              They just don't fit indoors...so, I use the gas stovetop when I have to cook indoors.

    • True. Bioengineering a human that doesn't desire to eat meat would be good. The food supply chain to support animal food produce is huge. Would be good if there were better meat-free fast food meals that didn't suck. I don't mean a meat-like vegetarian option, just vegetables that are not salted or cooked to death.

      • Perhaps a human that doesn't believe politician conspiracy theories and respects democracy...

        • There will always be that as there will always be some element of tribalism... That'll be a difficult one to engineer out.

        • Perhaps a human that doesn't believe politician conspiracy theories and respects democracy...

          Like all those people did on January 6th?

      • "True. Bioengineering a human " I think we need to stop right there. I still remember the test tube baby jokes that were popular when I was in highschool, and I certainly wouldn't want to be the unfortunate person that was "bioengineered" and my school chums found out about this. And I certainly wouldn't want to be that person if the crackpot screws the whole thing up.
    • I tried asking my super green friend about a more environmentally friendly meat source and all I got was crickets.

  • rain dance (Score:2, Funny)

    by groobly ( 6155920 )

    It's a well-known fact that Indian rain dances were very effective in bringing rain. The best way to fight climate change is to dance.

  • If you think cows are the problem then you need a new career.

  • by waspleg ( 316038 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @12:55PM (#64733966) Journal

    instead of steaks. I'm betting there is way more pollution from coal plants and cars than cows. I'm not looking, I don't care that much.

    • instead of steaks. I'm betting there is way more pollution from coal plants and cars than cows. I'm not looking, I don't care that much.

      Why bother comparing? Just because something is a smaller contributor than something else doesn't mean it disappears. Climate change doesn't give a fuck how you want to abuse statistics.

  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @01:00PM (#64733974) Homepage
    They compare the effect of cows to airplanes, but I would rather we Moo ve on reducing airplane use first. I like to eat, but don't really care if I fly.

    Go bull y the air travel people. Meanwhile I got milk.
    • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
      Commerce relies on planes to transport goods. Without planes, your lifestyle would change dramatically.
    • I like to eat, but don't really care if I fly.

      Thats like saying I care about living and surviving, but don’t really care if I have 20th or 21st Century technology to do it.

      The need for flying, can transform from a luxury to a necessity in an instant. It’s the entire reason certain organizations sponsor what is commonly known as angel flights.

    • but I would rather we Moo ve on reducing airplane use first. I like to eat, but don't really care if I fly.

      Gotchya. We'll get the only person in the world working on the climate change problem to switch to addressing air travel. Good steer mate. I was beginning to worried that we were putting our one resource on solving the wrong problem.

  • You fight climate change by: 1) lowering the population count, 2) cutting useless traveling and 3) export of useless goods: coffee, banana, mango etc. all year round all over the globe ... Read more (quality) books!

  • by damn_registrars ( 1103043 ) <damn.registrars@gmail.com> on Sunday August 25, 2024 @01:10PM (#64734016) Homepage Journal
    We're feeding the cow food that it doesn't normally eat. Most of our cows are bred by artificial insemination. We have breeds that have been selected for milk, or meat, or leather. The biggest problem with them stems from what we've already done to them.

    Yes, we can engineer them further if we want. That doesn't mean we won't produce a new problem along the way.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Selective breeding is engineering, just on a different scale. The domestic cows we have now would not have existed in the wild had we not manipulated them. Sure it's not the same as molecular engineering but we're still altered the organism in very profound ways.

        We've already had very real impacts on the cows that we've been breeding. As but one direct result of what we've done we have a breed that almost never delivers new calves on its own safely.

        Yes there is plenty to go wrong, and I'm not adv
    • The biggest problem with them stems from what we've already done to them.

      No the biggest problem is we breed them. Our breeding efforts haven't increased methane emissions from any other natural breed of cow. The fundamental issue of gut microbe remains the same. Cows shat and burped a millennia ago, they are shitting and burping now. They ate grass then, we're feeding them grass now.

      The only thing that really has changed is the volume.

      • They ate grass then, we're feeding them grass now.

        You're only partially correct there. The majority of cows raised in the US primarily are fed corn. They generally start on corn until they reach a certain "finishing" weight, at which point they move to grass. Guess when they produce most of their methane? The dairy cows are fed almost exclusively corn because it is more nutrient-dense (and less expensive per hectare) than grass, which allows them to produce milk more quickly and less expensively.

    • I've heard that the cow feed is often mixed with the shredded remains of other cows that aren't marketable for human consumption, basically turning cows into unwitting cannibals. Feeding a herbivore meat from rejects of their species, what could possibly go wrong?
      • Beef largely comes from male calves fattened at speed... not cows.

      • I've heard that the cow feed is often mixed with the shredded remains of other cows that aren't marketable for human consumption, basically turning cows into unwitting cannibals. Feeding a herbivore meat from rejects of their species, what could possibly go wrong?

        They stopped doing that after mad cow disease spread. https://www.fda.gov/animal-vet... [fda.gov] basically if the cow isn't fit for human consumption or isn't very young they are no longer allowed to feed it to other cows. In most of the world they banned feeding ruminants animal protein entirely and those left over cows and up in cat or dogfood instead.

  • by tekram ( 8023518 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @01:20PM (#64734026)
    Kinley et al. investigated Asparagopsis taxiformis. The study showed in vitro that 20 g/kg of fodder with the mentioned algae almost completely abolished CH4 generation while having no detrimental impact on forage digestibility Anim. Prod. Sci. 2016;56:282â"289. doi: 10.1071/AN15576
    • by az-saguaro ( 1231754 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @02:43PM (#64734230)

      So far, almost every Slashdot comment about this article moans about bioengineered cows. Maybe they didn't read the article or don't understand. Thanks for posting the one relevant comment.

      I followed your link and read the paper. Quite interesting. Of course, the carbon that was in the CH4 has to go somewhere, and they do not completely explain it. CO2 production went up, so methane was in part more thoroughly oxidized, but other comments implied that short chain fatty acids or sugars might have been generated and absorbed, so a benefit to the cow as well as the environment. It is not a carbon cancellation technology, but a benefit.

      And for those who misunderstood the article, they are modifying the diet or the germs in the gut, not the cows per se. Elsie is not being GMO'ed.

      Leave that to the folks at GLIBIE - the Gary Larson Institute of Bovine Intestinal Engineering.

  • Lab meat (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 )

    Why engineer a new cow when you can do away with it completely?

    We need to get better at making meat in a vat.

  • The Starbucks CEO (Score:3, Informative)

    by Vandil X ( 636030 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @01:39PM (#64734064)
    The Starbucks CEO is literally grandstanding over the fact that he plans to commute back and forth to work by private jet.

    Reel in some of these CEO, pop-star, and politician shenanigans first, before you fuck with my steak over climate change.
    • One arsehole is a minor contributor to climate change compared to and entire global industry. But I get it, it's easier to blame other people than accept a change that could affect you in some way.

      Can you imagine if this Starbucks CEO was Chinese? OMG the emissions we could blame on that one person would be grand!

  • A blade of grass emits the same amount of compounds regardless of where it decomposes, whether in a cow's stomach or the fields were it grew and died.

    Just. Stop. With the "Cows are gonna cause global warming and kill us all" line. That cows eat and concentrate the emissions due to decomposition makes no more or less emissions compared to millions of blades of grass decomposing throughout the millions of square acres of grass fields. It is still just dead grass decomposing.

    https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirk.. [www.cbc.ca]

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Sunday August 25, 2024 @02:42PM (#64734224) Homepage

      A blade of grass emits the same amount of compounds regardless of where it decomposes, whether in a cow's stomach or the fields were it grew and died.

      No. Anaerobic decomposition produces methane, while aerobic decomposition produces only carbon dioxide and water. Yes, it depend son where it decomposes.

      ...She said that it's important to note that methane is not released by the cows themselves, but the bacteria in their gut. Similar bacteria also exist in the environment and produce methane in wetlands, rice fields and landfills.

      Accurate. But most grass doesn't grow in wetlands, rice fields, or landfills. You are, however, right that these are indeed also sources of methane. Wetlands contribute an amount of methane roughly the same as the amoun produced by cows.. However, cows are pretty much under human control, so it's a lot easier to work on reducing the methane emissions from cows than that from wetlands.

      (Landfills are also under human control, and there is significant effort [slashdot.org] to reduce emissions from landfills as well)

    • this is beneath /. please close your account; it's bad enough with the russian bots and the few trumptards.

    • A blade of grass emits the same amount of compounds regardless of where it decomposes, whether in a cow's stomach or the fields were it grew and died.

      Completely and utterly false. The way something decomposes matters a lot, and cows are spectacularly bad at it.

      "Cows are gonna cause global warming and kill us all" line.

      No one has said they are going to kill us all, stop being hysterical. Cows are a problem to be addressed. They are not the sole source of climate change.

      Just. Stop.

      That's our line. Your UID is low enough that you should be credited with a base intelligence. Stop letting your generation down.

    • If you have fewer cows, then you raise less feed (alfalfa, corn, soy, etc.)

  • Can We Fight Climate Change By Bioengineering a Better Cow?

    You are engineering for the wrong metric if that metric is not taste, or cost.

    You would spend your time better engineering a sun shade to put into orbit.

  • When the fuck will these people accuse cattle farts/burps of being an agent for anthropic global warming? Are they really that dumb? When we are all down to eating worms, tardigrades, or just grass, won't the wild bison population, hippopotamus, gnu or whathever the fucking big ruminant who take over also emmit so called "greenhouse gasses"? If these people are so worried about the environment, removing themselves from the global warming, greenhouse-gas-emmiting pool would be extremely benefical. And they

    • Vegetables.
      Not animals.

    • It says right in the summary:

      > "Enteric fermentation," or livestock's digestive process, accounts for 22 percent of all U.S. methane emissions, and the manure they produce makes up eight percent more

      So 30% of all methane in the US is from livestock.

      Not 2%. Not 2.5%. 30%. Of a very potent greenhouse gas.

      And that's just from their digestion, there's also all the land cleared for them, and all the food grown. Something like 70-90% of all soy and corn grown in the US is to feed livestock.

      And that's just the

      • Yes, 30% of methane. A big scary number taken completely out of context to scare people against the healthiest food you can eat and an animal which can have nearly every part of it used for something after slaughtering. What matters is overall impact, not impact of an individual component (methane). From the same EPA, the overall impact of the entire agriculture industry is 10%. Of that 10%, half is from using electricity to power buildings and tools, so the agriculture industry produces 5% of USA emiss

  • Assume a spherical cow...
  • These are the same people who scream like a mashed cat if you leave a footprint in a swamp. Now they want to permanently alter the physiology of an entire species so they can advance their cash-grab political scam.

    The hypocrisy could bend space-time.

  • by The Cat ( 19816 )

    The bullshit jokes write themselves.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Feedlots are rhe problem.

    Feedlots feed cattle lots of grains and sugars especially corn and molasses that are not part of their natural diet. This causes digestive upset and thus lots of gas.

    grass-fed cattle living and grazing on natural pastures do not emit anywhere close to the amount of gas that feedlot cattle do.

    So, this is a man-made problem, not a cattle made problem.

    Feedlots are disgusting and inhumane and cause illness in both cattle and the people that eat the meat. Feedlots were a backwards ste

  • Enchanted Village, A E van Vogt

  • Outdated Science (Score:5, Informative)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Sunday August 25, 2024 @04:07PM (#64734428) Homepage Journal

    A recent paper did a more complete model of the /grass fed/ cattle and when integrating the cattlebeast, its dung, the microbes, fungus, and plants it fertilizes, and the carbon those deposit - grazing cattle on land is slightly greenhouse-gas negative.

    Basically it's healthy food and not a problem under any warming model, no matter how whacky their parameters.

    The corn-fed, feedlot cattle are a different thing. Massie (a farmer himself, as well as a professional engineer) has been sponsoring the PRIME Act for years to improve local regenerative food but corrupt big-food lobbyists always block it.

    They should be the target of activism, not ranchers.

    • They should be the target of activism, not ranchers.

      Ranchers whose cattle spends time on feedlots are part of the problem no matter how you or they feel about it.

  • It will be some combination of technological fixes, not emoting and hectoring, that fixes things.
  • "Can Cow Backpacks Reduce Global Methane Emissions" This turned my stomach a little bit.
  • Given how important the human gut microbiome is to health - or lack thereof - it's easy to imagine that messing with a cow's microbiome might lead to animals that are more susceptible to disease or that otherwise have a higher mortality rate. The opposite effect is also entirely possible - but someone needs to check on it before proceeding.

    Also, BSE - 'mad cow disease' - is thought to begin in the small intestine of cows. What if significantly altering the microbiome somehow increases the incidence of BSE?

  • Why are they trying to get rid of cows' methane production instead of collecting it as fuel?
    We've already seen multiple projects about collecting biomethane.
    • The methane comes mostly out of the hole that food goes into. You're going to need to engineer a cow with a methane-only hole if you want to capture the methane. GLWT.

      Maybe you could do it with roofed feedlots? But the volume of gases which will necessarily be involved becomes impractical to separate.

      • by hawk ( 1151 )

        Just need to put in a valve and flap, so food down opens the flap, but back pressure opens a release valve and blocks the flap.

        Hmm, I know some people that could really use this . . .

  • Cow farts are natural, but Starbucks CEO flying several times a week in the corporate jet emits more than 1,000's of cows ! Leave the cows alone ! Go after man made sources !!!
  • When reading the article I thought This sounds like genetic Beano for Cows. For those not familiar with Beano tablets quote. beano® Tablets contains a natural enzyme that breaks down the complex carbohydrates found in many foods, making them easier to digest so they don't cause gas.*
  • Stop eating cows or their animal gland secretions.

  • They'll latch onto this and be screetching even more about how we should all be vegan, or should eat bugs. *ick*
  • magically means fewer cows, less demnd on resources or energy, less pollution...

    But NOOOOO... let's try and bio-engineer our way out of this instead of, you know, doing the far simpler, more responsible thing... simply stop breeding with carefree abandon and being responsible.

    No. Slowing birthrates do not make this point moot. Too little too late.

  • Just to "fight climate change", something that naturally is unfightable, they are proposing genetically engineering the species on the planet to make them have fresher farts?

    Christ. It would be a better idea to try and just ban volcanoes?

    How about genetically engineering Humans to need to hump less? Or perhaps have strict controls on when Humans can have a hump or not? I'd say never before the age of 21 and only when mandated by the government department that will need to be created, totally apolitical,

  • "I burn my finger when I touch the hot stove. Maybe we should engineer a cooler stove?"

    It's amazing how people will do everything except address root causes of an issue.

    Meat is terrible for the environment, not great for health, to say nothing of the animal suffering it perpetuates.

Ocean: A body of water occupying about two-thirds of a world made for man -- who has no gills. -- Ambrose Bierce

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