Episodi

  • Sustainability VS. Stewardship, What's the Difference?
    Jan 21 2026

    This week on CLEAR Conversations, Katie Roberti sat down for a conversation that reflects both her roots and her mission. As Director of Communications for the California Cattlemen’s Association (CCA), Roberti spends her days translating the realities of ranching into language policymakers, media, and the public can understand. But her connection to agriculture is far more personal than professional. Dr. Kelly Nichols, Assistant Professor at UC Davis sits down with CLEAR Conversations host, Tracy Sellers. The Nichols Lab focuses on characterizing the digestive and metabolic flexibility of dairy cattle to elevate our understanding of dietary protein and energy interactions, mammary gland metabolism, and postabsorptive nutrient utilization to improve the transfer of dietary nutrients into milk. Her lab conducts studies investigating metabolite flux at the tissue level (e.g., mammary gland), energy and nitrogen balance, digestibility, and milk production in response to nutritional interventions. Further, she is interested in how the postabsorptive efficiencies of nutrients (e.g., amino acids) interact and change with the physiological state of the cow throughout lactation. Listen on: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/clear-conversations/id1844923534 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0EsxxMUuHGRysasRq5k1bS iHeartRadio: https://iheart.com/podcast/299490214 Amazon Music/Audible: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/94808eee-a498-49ec-a3da-9bae97d0250d

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    37 min
  • Can We Really Fix Methane Without Breaking Digestion?
    Jan 7 2026
    Dr. Kelly Nichols, Assistant Professor at UC Davis sits down with CLEAR Conversations host, Tracy Sellers. The Nichols Lab focuses on characterizing the digestive and metabolic flexibility of dairy cattle to elevate our understanding of dietary protein and energy interactions, mammary gland metabolism, and postabsorptive nutrient utilization to improve the transfer of dietary nutrients into milk. Her lab conducts studies investigating metabolite flux at the tissue level (e.g., mammary gland), energy and nitrogen balance, digestibility, and milk production in response to nutritional interventions. Further, she is interested in how the postabsorptive efficiencies of nutrients (e.g., amino acids) interact and change with the physiological state of the cow throughout lactation. Listen on: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/clear-conversations/id1844923534 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0EsxxMUuHGRysasRq5k1bS iHeartRadio: https://iheart.com/podcast/299490214 Amazon Music/Audible: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/94808eee-a498-49ec-a3da-9bae97d0250d Text File: 00:00:00:00 - 00:00:00:18 Mitigating 00:00:00:18 - 00:00:01:18 enteric methane, 00:00:01:18 - 00:00:02:14 and what could be 00:00:02:14 - 00:00:04:10 the consequences of 00:00:04:10 - 00:00:05:21 drastically reducing 00:00:05:21 - 00:00:07:12 a really essential cycle 00:00:07:12 - 00:00:08:03 in the rumen. 00:00:08:03 - 00:00:09:07 We're very focused 00:00:09:07 - 00:00:10:01 on hitting 00:00:10:01 - 00:00:11:18 those targets, reducing 00:00:11:18 - 00:00:12:07 and coming up 00:00:12:07 - 00:00:13:01 with really innovative 00:00:13:01 - 00:00:14:03 ways to do that. 00:00:14:03 - 00:00:15:09 But we might be missing 00:00:15:09 - 00:00:16:03 some of that down 00:00:16:03 - 00:00:16:12 the road 00:00:16:12 - 00:00:17:15 Consequences, 00:00:17:15 - 00:00:18:10 for example, 00:00:18:10 - 00:00:19:06 how that interacts 00:00:19:06 - 00:00:20:04 with protein 00:00:20:04 - 00:00:28:08 metabolism in the body. 00:00:28:10 - 00:00:28:14 Well, 00:00:28:14 - 00:00:29:22 welcome to the Clear 00:00:29:22 - 00:00:31:05 Conversations podcast. 00:00:31:05 - 00:00:31:15 We're excited. 00:00:31:15 - 00:00:31:23 You're here 00:00:31:23 - 00:00:32:16 with us today. 00:00:32:16 - 00:00:32:20 Today 00:00:32:20 - 00:00:33:11 we're going to be talking 00:00:33:11 - 00:00:35:19 about cows and nutrition 00:00:35:19 - 00:00:36:20 And sustainability. 00:00:36:20 - 00:00:37:09 They're all 00:00:37:09 - 00:00:38:01 tied together. 00:00:38:01 - 00:00:39:10 They're all connected. 00:00:39:10 - 00:00:40:05 And our guest today 00:00:40:05 - 00:00:41:04 is Kelly Nichols. 00:00:41:04 - 00:00:41:20 She's an assistant 00:00:41:20 - 00:00:42:05 professor 00:00:42:05 - 00:00:42:21 of animal science 00:00:42:21 - 00:00:44:03 here at UC Davis. 00:00:44:03 - 00:00:45:11 Welcome, Kelly. Thanks. 00:00:45:11 - 00:00:46:03 Thanks for having me. 00:00:46:03 - 00:00:47:02 Great to be here. 00:00:47:02 - 00:00:47:15 Thanks for 00:00:47:15 - 00:00:48:11 being here with us. 00:00:48:11 - 00:00:49:03 So first of all, 00:00:49:03 - 00:00:49:21 tell us a little bit 00:00:49:21 - 00:00:50:13 about yourself, 00:00:50:13 - 00:00:51:05 your background 00:00:51:05 - 00:00:52:18 and how you got to study 00:00:52:18 - 00:00:53:15 dairy nutrition 00:00:53:15 - 00:00:54:06 in particular. 00:00:54:06 - 00:00:55:05 So yeah, I'm 00:00:55:05 - 00:00:56:16 a dairy nutritionist. 00:00:56:16 - 00:00:58:00 I'm from Canada 00:00:58:00 - 00:00:59:03 originally, didn't 00:00:59:03 - 00:01:00:22 grow up with dairy cows. 00:01:00:22 - 00:01:01:22 I actually grew 00:01:01:22 - 00:01:02:23 up on a horse farm, 00:01:02:23 - 00:01:04:10 so I always knew 00:01:04:10 - 00:01:05:07 kind of the realities 00:01:05:07 - 00:01:06:18 of taking care of large 00:01:06:18 - 00:01:09:18 animals 365 days a year. 00:01:09:20 - 00:01:10:14 At first I thought I 00:01:10:14 - 00:01:11:16 wanted to be a vet, 00:01:11:16 - 00:01:12:22 but when I went to 00:01:12:22 - 00:01:13:19 the University of Guelph 00:01:13:19 - 00:01:15:04 to do my undergrad, 00:01:15:04 - 00:01:17:01 that's where I started 00:01:17:01 - 00:01:17:12 to get involved 00:01:17:12 - 00:01:18:19 in research projects. 00:01:18:19 - 00:01:19:16 And, 00:01:19:16 - 00:01:20:06 one of the labs 00:01:20:06 - 00:01:21:04 I worked in 00:01:21:04 - 00:01:22:10 was a dairy 00:01:22:10 - 00:01:22:19 nutrition 00:01:22:19 - 00:01:24:04 and metabolism lab. 00:01:24:04 - 00:01:25:02 And you combine 00:01:25:02 - 00:01:25:11 that with 00:01:25:11 - 00:01:26:04 some of the courses 00:01:26:04 - 00:01:26:22 I was taking, 00:01:26:22 - 00:01:28:05 and I really fell in love 00:01:28:05 - 00:01:30:12 with ruminant metabolism 00:01:30:12 - 00:01:31:18 and how nutrition 00:01:31:18 - 00:01:32:15 can influence 00:01:32:15 - 00:01:34:00 how, 00:01:34:00 - 00:01:34:20 all of the metabolic 00:01:34:20 - 00:01:35:16 pathways work 00:01:35:16 - 00:01:37:14 in, particularly dairy 00:01...
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    21 min
  • How We Can Make Dairy More Climate-Friendly (Real Farm Solutions)
    Dec 3 2025
    Conor McCabe sits down with CLEAR Conversations host, Tracy Sellers. At the CLEAR Center at UC Davis, researchers spend their days asking a big question with global stakes: how can we raise livestock in ways that are more climate-friendly? For PhD student Conor McCabe, now approaching the end of his fifth year in the Mitloehner Lab, that question has fueled not just one research project—but nearly an entire year of long days, early mornings, and a sprawling scientific effort that spans animals, microbes, emissions, and the future of food systems. McCabe didn’t start out as a dairy kid. He grew up on a small farm in Oregon—“pretty much an Old McDonald’s farm,” he jokes—with pigs, cattle, pumpkins, and Christmas trees. His mother once served as a dairy princess, but dairy cattle weren’t part of Connor’s life until college. After studying animal science across Cornell, Purdue, and now UC Davis, he’s seen “different pockets of cows across the country,” as he puts it. But it wasn’t until arriving at Davis that he found the right intersection of ruminant biology and real-world impact. Text File: 00:00:00:00 - 00:00:00:11 Because at the 00:00:00:11 - 00:00:01:07 end of the day, 00:00:01:07 - 00:00:02:06 what we're 00:00:02:06 - 00:00:02:18 thinking about 00:00:02:18 - 00:00:03:19 how can we 00:00:03:19 - 00:00:04:22 improve nutrition, 00:00:04:22 - 00:00:06:07 how can we reduce 00:00:06:07 - 00:00:07:02 environmental impacts, 00:00:07:02 - 00:00:08:12 and how can we help with 00:00:08:12 - 00:00:09:09 the billions of people 00:00:09:09 - 00:00:10:12 that are involved 00:00:10:12 - 00:00:12:01 in livestock systems. 00:00:12:01 - 00:00:12:12 Think about 00:00:12:12 - 00:00:13:08 how do we create more 00:00:13:08 - 00:00:14:07 sustainable food systems, 00:00:14:07 - 00:00:14:23 at least for 00:00:14:23 - 00:00:15:23 for the rest of my 00:00:15:23 - 00:00:23:10 my career here. 00:00:23:12 - 00:00:24:03 Welcome to 00:00:24:03 - 00:00:25:14 Clear Conversations. 00:00:25:14 - 00:00:25:20 You know, 00:00:25:20 - 00:00:26:11 the clear center. 00:00:26:11 - 00:00:27:03 Our researchers 00:00:27:03 - 00:00:27:23 are testing ways 00:00:27:23 - 00:00:28:19 to make livestock 00:00:28:19 - 00:00:30:01 more climate friendly. 00:00:30:01 - 00:00:30:10 And today, 00:00:30:10 - 00:00:31:02 we're going to be talking 00:00:31:02 - 00:00:31:08 to one of 00:00:31:08 - 00:00:32:08 those researchers. 00:00:32:08 - 00:00:32:21 His name is 00:00:32:21 - 00:00:33:13 Conor McCabe, 00:00:33:13 - 00:00:34:10 and he's a 00:00:34:10 - 00:00:35:06 PhD student in the 00:00:35:06 - 00:00:36:07 Mitloehner lab. 00:00:36:07 - 00:00:36:20 He is working 00:00:36:20 - 00:00:38:00 with feed additives 00:00:38:00 - 00:00:38:17 with dairy cows. 00:00:38:17 - 00:00:39:09 And he's going to tell us 00:00:39:09 - 00:00:39:20 a little bit 00:00:39:20 - 00:00:41:01 about his research today. 00:00:41:01 - 00:00:41:09 Conor, 00:00:41:09 - 00:00:42:07 thanks for joining us. 00:00:42:07 - 00:00:43:11 I'm so happy to be here 00:00:43:11 - 00:00:44:01 and looking 00:00:44:01 - 00:00:44:13 forward to it. 00:00:44:13 - 00:00:45:02 All right. 00:00:45:02 - 00:00:45:21 We are looking forward 00:00:45:21 - 00:00:46:13 to talking to you. 00:00:46:13 - 00:00:47:04 So first of all, 00:00:47:04 - 00:00:47:18 tell us a little bit 00:00:47:18 - 00:00:48:13 about yourself 00:00:48:13 - 00:00:49:06 and your background. 00:00:49:06 - 00:00:50:16 You've done a lot, 00:00:50:16 - 00:00:50:22 even 00:00:50:22 - 00:00:51:18 before you came to UC 00:00:51:18 - 00:00:52:13 Davis. You've done a lot. 00:00:52:13 - 00:00:53:04 So tell us a little bit 00:00:53:04 - 00:00:54:00 about that. Yeah. 00:00:54:00 - 00:00:55:07 So I'm currently 00:00:55:07 - 00:00:55:23 wrapping up 00:00:55:23 - 00:00:57:03 the fifth year of my, 00:00:57:03 - 00:00:58:20 my PhD here at Davis. 00:00:58:20 - 00:01:00:08 The last couple of months 00:01:00:08 - 00:01:01:02 of my time 00:01:01:02 - 00:01:02:09 is coming up here, 00:01:02:09 - 00:01:03:08 but I'm originally 00:01:03:08 - 00:01:04:04 from the West Coast, 00:01:04:04 - 00:01:05:14 originally from Oregon 00:01:05:14 - 00:01:06:11 as my hometown where 00:01:06:11 - 00:01:08:02 my family has a 00:01:08:02 - 00:01:10:05 small farm where we have, 00:01:10:05 - 00:01:11:11 pigs, 00:01:11:11 - 00:01:12:15 cattle, Christmas 00:01:12:15 - 00:01:14:10 trees, pumpkins, 00:01:14:12 - 00:01:15:03 all that order. 00:01:15:03 - 00:01:15:19 So a big 00:01:15:19 - 00:01:17:11 old McDonald farm, 00:01:17:11 - 00:01:18:11 and that got my interest 00:01:18:11 - 00:01:20:22 in animal science. 00:01:20:22 - 00:01:21:19 And then 00:01:21:19 - 00:01:22:18 I went to New York, 00:01:22:18 - 00:01:24:10 to Cornell for undergrad, 00:01:24:10 - 00:01:25:16 did a masters at Purdue, 00:01:25:16 - 00:01:26:05 and now 00:01:26:05 - 00:01:26:22 I've come here to UC 00:01:26:22 - 00:01:28:00 Davis. 00:01:28:00 - 00:01:28:12 There's cows 00:01:28:12 - 00:01:29:...
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    22 min
  • Utilizing Genetics to Reduce Methane Emissions in Animal Agriculture
    Nov 19 2025

    Dr. Troy Rowan sits down with CLEAR Conversations host, Tracy Sellers. Dr. Rowan was a featured speaker at the 2025 State of the Science Summit at UC Davis. The event will return next year on June 16-18, 2026, continuing its focus on advancing livestock methane research and collaborative solutions. Rowan, now an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, grew up surrounded by cattle on his family’s Charolais operation in Iowa. His family has been farming and ranching there for more than a century — long enough for the rhythms of agriculture to get in his blood. Listen on: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/clear-conversations/id1844923534 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0EsxxMUuHGRysasRq5k1bS iHeartRadio: https://iheart.com/podcast/299490214 Amazon Music/Audible: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/94808eee-a498-49ec-a3da-9bae97d0250d

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    11 min
  • World’s First Carbon Tax on Livestock Emissions!
    Nov 5 2025

    When it comes to climate action, Denmark has rarely been content to sit on the sidelines. Now, the small Nordic nation is taking another pioneering leap — becoming the first country in the world to implement a carbon tax on livestock emissions, set to begin in 2030. During a CLEAR Conversations podcast, which was filmed at the 2025 State of the Science Summit held at UC Davis, Anna Trillingsgaard from the Embassy of Denmark shared how this ambitious plan came to be and what it means for farmers, the environment, and the global agricultural community who is watching closely.

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    12 min
  • Investing in Technologies to Capture Methane Emissions
    Oct 22 2025

    When it comes to talking about methane and cattle, few people can make the science sound both accessible and hopeful quite like Dr. Sara Place. A former UC Davis graduate student and now an associate professor of animal sciences at Colorado State University, Place has built her career around understanding how livestock can be part of the climate solution — not just part of the problem.

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    9 min
  • How Can We Grow More Food With Less Impact?
    Oct 8 2025

    For over two decades, Dr. Mitloehner has been at the forefront of research on how animal agriculture affects our air and our climate. With deep expertise in emissions and volatile organic compounds, his work initially focused on air quality in regions like California’s Central Valley—home to both the nation’s richest agricultural output and some of its poorest air quality. In recent years, methane has taken center stage in climate discourse—not just scientifically, but politically. Once a topic reserved for technical discussions about manure management and feed efficiency, it has become a flashpoint in debates over sustainability, regulation, and even the legitimacy of livestock farming itself. Dr. Frank Mitloehner, Professor and Air Quality Specialist with the CLEAR Center sits down with Associate Director for Communications at the CLEAR Center, Joe Proudman.

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    44 min
  • Salute to Agriculture and Football!
    Oct 8 2025

    UC Davis football will charge into their Big Sky Conference opener against conference rival Weber State, setting the stage for a night packed with excitement. With students back on campus, the energy will be electric—complete with the thrilling First-Year Field Storm, and a stadium full of Aggie spirit. Kickoff is expected at 7 p.m., but the festivities fire up well before then. At 5 p.m., join us for an ag-tastic tailgate that brings the farm right to the field. Back by popular demand, this pre-game showcase will feature cattle, sheep, goats, tractors, and more—turning the tailgate into a tribute to the roots that make UC Davis a leader in agricultural excellence. It’s a chance to honor the Animal Science Department and the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, and to gather with friends, faculty, students, and supporters in a true Aggie-style celebration.

    “To see agriculture celebrated in such a high-energy, crowd-filled space like a football game is incredible," said Dr. Frank Mitloehner, director of the CLEAR Center. "It’s a reminder that farming isn’t just essential—it’s also deeply connected to our everyday lives. And this game brings that message to life in a way that’s fun and exciting and it will be a powerful tribute to the people driving agriculture forward.”

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    12 min