Ruminant red meat production systems around the world often include a grain feeding phase. The role of red meat in the food system is therefore often discussed in terms of the food vs feed debate, as well as invoking the comparatively poor feed conversion efficiency of ruminants and climate impacts from enteric methane. The concept of net protein contribution (NPC) incorporates the quality attributes of protein produced by livestock systems into estimates of the efficiency of production systems. We applied the NPC method to two Australian beef supply chains, i) Grass-fed and ii) Grain-finished beef, using an established model of ruminant grazing systems (GrassGro®) and these are reflective of beef production systems in other countries. The beef supply chains evaluated did not compete with humans for protein. The Grain-finished beef supply chain, while positively contributing to human protein requirements (NPC value 1.96), had markedly lower NPC values than the Grass-fed...
Skip Nav Destination
Journal Article|
December 01 2022
Net protein contribution and enteric methane production of pasture and grain-finished beef cattle supply chains.
CSIRO Agriculture & Food, Perth, WA 6014, Australia. E-mail dean.thomas@csiro.au
Journal: Animal
Citation: Animal (2022) 15 (12)
DOI: 10.1016/j.animal.2021.100392
Published: 2021
Citation
Thomas, D. T., Beletse, Y. G., Dominik, S., Lehnert, S. A.; Net protein contribution and enteric methane production of pasture and grain-finished beef cattle supply chains.. IFIS Food and Health Sciences Database 2022; doi:
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your Institution
Analyse Trends
Explore publication trends in the sciences of food and health.
Discover and compare the use of keywords over time.
Find global trends in research through publication categories.