Enteric methane emissions from ruminant livestock contribute to global warming, creating an urgent need for effective mitigation strategies that do not compromise animal productivity and welfare. Methanogenic archaea within the rumen microbiome drive enteric methane emissions. However, large-scale rumen-fluid sampling in commercial production systems is impractical, due to its invasive nature and the associated logistical challenges. This study hypothesised that rumination enables the capture of rumen microbial signals within the oral cavity and using oral microbiome profiles to provide a practical, non-invasive alternative method for proxy methane phenotyping in commercial production systems. To test the hypothesis, we estimated the oral microbiability, defined as the proportion of phenotypic variance in methane emissions explained by oral microbiome variation. Samples were collected from 209 animals across two trials in Queensland, Australia. Oral microbiome samples were obtained from all animals, with paired rumen samples in one trial, and methane emissions were measured using either the sulphur hexafluoride (SF) tracer technique or the GreenFeed system. Microbial features were characterised using taxonomic and functional annotations, and microbiability was estimated using mixed linear models incorporating microbiome-based relationship matrices. Although the small sample size limited strong conclusions, the oral microbiability estimates reported in this study were comparable to those derived from rumen samples. Functional microbial profiles generally explained a greater proportion of methane variation than taxonomic profiles, suggesting that microbial function is more closely linked to methane production than community composition alone. However, these differences were not statistically significant due to large standard errors. These findings suggest that oral microbiome sampling potentially provides a practical, minimally invasive, scalable proxy method for methane emissions of individual cattle in grazing systems, where direct methane gas measurements are labour-intensive and difficult to implement. Integrating oral microbiome profiles in the existing breeding model with the host genetics, weight and environmental factors could provide a promising pathway for enabling selection for low emissions and advancing reduced emissions livestock farming under real-world production conditions.
A woman’s uterus has been kept alive outside the body for the first time
“Think of this as a human body,” says Javier González. In front of me is essentially a metal box on wheels. Standing at around a

