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Animal Waste Management

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Title: Animal Waste Management


1
Animal Waste Management
Water quality
Air quality
  • Michael Westendorf
  • Rutgers Cooperative Extension
  • New Brunswick, New Jersey

2
Livestock and Poultry Environmental Stewardship
(LPES) Curriculum
Project Leaders Rick Koelsch, University of
Nebraska and Frank Humenik, North Carolina State
University Project Manager Diane Huntrods, MWPS,
ISU Special thanks to Dr. Sarah Ralston for
Equine Slides

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Objectives
  • Introduce principles of environmental
    responsibility and the role animal waste can play
    in sustaining the environment
  • Review key environmental issues facing livestock
    industries
  • Give a brief overview of Best Management
    principles of manure management
  • Briefly describe odor and air emission issues for
    livestock producers

5
Animal Waste Management Dilemma
  • Increasing animal numbers
  • Decreasing land base
  • Encroaching suburbia
  • New waste management techniques are needed, these
    new techniques may require more management and
    expense

6
Prevention Planning for the impossible
North Carolina swine farm flooded after
Hurricanes Dennis and Floyd, September 1999
(7,040-head swine feeder-to-finish farm)
7
Prevention Responding to Tragedy
8
Leading Sources of Water Quality Destruction
Rank Rivers Lakes Waterways
1 Agriculture Agriculture Municipal Point
Sources 2 Municipal Urban Runoff Urban
Runoff Point Sources Storm Sewers Storm
Sewers 3 Urban Runoff Hydrologic/Habitat A
griculture Storm Sewers Modification 4 Reso
urce Municipal Industrial Extraction Point
Sources Point Sources
Source EPA National Water Quality Inventory
Report to Congress 1993
9
Sources of N and P to Watersheds in the
Northeastern States (1995 GAO Report to U.S.
Congress)
80 60 40 20 0
Atmosphere Fertilizer Manure
Point Source
Nitrogen Phosphorus
10
Manure P vs. Crop Land P Use
lt 25 25 - 50 50 - 100 gt100
11
Manure P vs. Crop Land P Use
lt 25 25 - 50 50 - 100 gt100
12
Phosphorous Utilization
lt 25 25 - 50 50 - 100 gt100
13
Manure P vs. Crop Land P Use
Do you live in region of regional nutrient
concentration?
lt 25 25 - 50 50 - 100 gt100
14
Water Quality Contaminantsin Manure
Possible Environmental Pollutants Risk
  • 1) nitrate-n health
  • 2) ammonia-n fish kills
  • 3) phosphorus Eutrophication
  • 4) pathogens/bacteria health
  • 5) organic matter oxygen depletion

15
Environmental Benefits of Manure
  • ? Nitrogen leaching potential.
  • ? Soil erosion runoff.
  • ? Soil carbon/organic matter.
  • ? Crop productivity.
  • Replaces energy intensive nitrogen fertilizer
    limited resource phosphorous fertilizer - .

16
Environmental Benefits of Manure Why?
vs.
Manure
Commercial fertilizer
  • Manure contains organic carbon.
  • Organic carbon is key to soil health structure.

17
Review of Historical Soil Conservation
Experiment Data
Erosion is still the number one source of
nonpoint source pollution in the United States.
  • Manure reduced total runoff by 1 to 68.
  • Manure reduced soil erosion by 13 to 77.

(Risse and Gilley, 2000)
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Non-Point Source Pollution
Surface water
Groundwater
20
What is a Point Source?
  • The term point source is defined very broadly in
    the Clean Water Act because it has been through
    25 years of litigation. It means any discernible,
    confined and discrete conveyance, such as a pipe,
    ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, discrete
    fissure, or container. It also includes vessels
    or other floating craft from which pollutants are
    or may be discharged. By law, the term point
    source also includes CONCENTRATED ANIMAL FEEDING
    OPERATIONS (CAFO), which are places where animals
    are confined and fed. By law, agricultural storm
    water discharges and return flows from irrigated
    agriculture are not point sources.

21
What is a CAFO?
  • Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation.
  • CAFOs are always assumed to be point sources of
    pollution.
  • Any farm that discharges animal waste into a
    water body or a wetland could be called a
    point-source polluter no matter how small the
    farm.

22
Number of Animal Units Required for a Farm to Be
Designated a CAFO
An Animal Unit is the standard measure in
determining CAFOs. A 1,000-pound steer is the
standard the equivalent number of any other type
of livestock is considered one animal unit.
23
Farms That Discharge
  • Even small farms might be regulated as CAFOs
    (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) or point
    source polluters if
  • Manure is stacked to close to a stream without
    adequate setback
  • Manure uncovered ?
  • Animals have access to waterways ?
  • Waste stacked or spread too close to a wetland
  • Lack of vegetative cover

24
What Are the Water Quality Concerns Related to
Animal Feeding Operations?
  • Manure and wastewater from Animal Feeding
    Operations (AFOs) have the potential to
    contribute pollutants such as nitrogen and
    phosphorus, organic matter, sediments, pathogens,
    heavy metals, hormones, antibiotics, and ammonia
    to the environment. Animal Feeding Operations
    (AFOs) are considered to be non-point source
    polluters.

25
Recycling of Nutrients
Inputs
Feed Manure
Losses or Soil
Storage
26
Are Nutrient Inputs Outputs in Balance?
Water In
Water Out
1 gal
1 gal
Farm Pond
27
Are Nutrient Inputs Outputs in Balance?
Water In
Water Out
1 gal
Farm Pond
28
Plugging the Leaks . . .Temporary Solution to
Imbalance
Water In
Water Out
Sand Bags
1 gal
Farm Pond
29
Sustainable Solutions Must Correct the Imbalance!
Water In
Water Out
Sand Bags
1.5 gal.
1.5 gal
Farm Pond
30
Best Management Practices
  • Best management practices or BMPs relating to
    animal waste management are those practices that
    efficiently provide nutrients for uptake by
    plants and minimize nutrient impact on the
    environment.
  • Best management practices are very site specific,
    and a BMP in one place may not be useful for
    another location.
  • Used to protect and conserve natural resources.
  • Structural and managerial.
  • Require proper design, training, and maintenance

31
BMP Manure Storage
  • Avoid spreading near streams or other waterways

32
Case Study Improper Modification of Storage
Structure
  • 7.3-acre swine lagoon, SE North Carolina.
  • No irrigation equipment on site.
  • About a week before the spill, farm workers
    improperly installed pipe in lagoon embankment.
  • Rainwater from a tropical storm ponded above and
    then scoured out the embankment near where pipe
    was installed.
  • The lagoon breached, releasing lagoon effluent
    and sludge.

33
  • Result
  • Over 22 million gallons of effluent and sludge
    were discharged into a nearby creek.
  • Approximately 4,000 fish were killed in the creek
    downstream of the spill.
  • Response
  • Television and print media reported the lagoon
    spill in the state and country. The spill was
    even reported in newspapers as far away as De
    Hague, Netherlands.
  • State water quality investigators confirmed the
    spill had caused the fish kill in the creek.
  • The farmer was charged with violating state water
    quality standards.

34
Action
  • The farm was required to depopulate until repairs
    were made to the lagoon, irrigation equipment was
    purchased, and sufficient land application fields
    were cleared and planted.
  • The farmer was convicted and fined.
  • Repairs and land clearing were completed about
    one and a half years after the lagoon breach.

35
Where to Locate Manure Storage? Where to Spread
Manure?
  • Geological Investigation

Streams
Lakes
Aquifers/water tables
36
Using Soil Surveys/Maps
  • Soil types/soil series
  • Area limits of various soil types
  • Slope and topography
  • Erosion
  • Drainage
  • Physical features

37
Choosing a Manure Storage Facility
  • Land application methods, solid vs. liquid
  • Type of bedding
  • Hauling, distances, volume
  • Space, more space is required for earthen
    structures than for tanks
  • Treatment

38
What Type of Manure Storage Facility Should I
Select?
  • Treatment Considerations
  • Biological treatment--lagoon storage
  • Solids separation--solids liquid storage

39
What Type of Manure Storage Facility Should I
Select?
  • Space Considerations
  • More space is required for earthen impoundments.
  • Less space is required for tanks

40
Slurry Manure Storage Outside Tanks
  • Usually concrete or glass-lined steel tanks.
  • Manure may be pumped or flow into tank by
    gravity.
  • Agitation is necessary.
  • Tanks may be covered for odor control.

41
Slurry Manure Storage Earthen Basins
  • Usually less costly than tanks
  • Can accommodate some lot runoff
  • Requires soils investigation and seal
    construction
  • Mowing and berm maintenance required

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Liquid Manure Storage Lagoons
  • Commonly used when some treatment needed for
    handling or reduced odors
  • Contain a permanent treatment volume for bacteria
  • Earthen structures larger than slurry facilities

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Solid Manure Storage
  • Covered facilities
  • Tarp may provide cover with less cost and more
    labor
  • Stack or stockpile in a well-drained area for
    later hauling
  • Regulations may require runoff control

47
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Manure Stacking Facility
  • Allows for the accumulation of solids
  • Inexpensive method of separating liquids from
    solids
  • Leachate can be controlled
  • Works only with solid manure waste

50
Grass filter strips
  • Inexpensive to install
  • Removes some solids from liquids
  • Maintenance is not easy
  • Needs to be long and flat
  • Channel flow reduces effectiveness

51
Grass filter strips
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Manure Storage
  • Site selection, flat, relatively impermeable,
    deep water table
  • Not near streams or wetlands
  • Keep covered if possible

56
BMP Solid Manure Removal Collection and Loading
Scraper blades
Front-end loaders
Skid-steer loaders
57
Solid Manure Removal Collection and Loading
Manure spreaders
Trucks
Tractor-pulled carts
58
BMP Manure Spreading
  • Spreader
  • Do you know the rate?
  • How about the spreader pattern?

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Slope
  • Apply manure to sites with the gentlest slopes as
    possible.
  • Avoid fields with slopes gt10.
  • Measure slopes whenever possible (contact
    Extension Agent or NRCS for assistance).

61
Application rates that exceed soil infiltration
result in runoff
62
The Nitrogen Cycle
Lighting Rainfall
N2 Fixation
N2O NO N2
Plant - Animal Residues
Plant Uptake
Volatilization
NO3- / NH4
N2
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER
NH3
N2O
Mineralization
NO
NH4
R-NH2
R-NH2
NO2
NO3-
Aminization
Ammonification
Denitrification
Immobilization
NO3-
NO2-
Nitrification
Leaching
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Critical Sources of P Loss
P loss vulnerability Low (clear)) Medium High
90 of P export comes from lt 20 of watershed
65
Which Manure Where?
  • Apply manure with the highest N content in the
    spring or fall and with the lowest in the summer.
  • Match manure value to crop yield potential.
  • High N manure to high N requirement crops
  • High P manure to soils with lowest P levels

66
  • Export litter/manure when total N exceeds
    capacity.

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BMP Manure Analysis
75
BMP Soil Testing
  • Monitor soil pH and nutrients.
  • Fine tune Manure Management Plan.
  • Take representative samples.
  • Review analysis with technical specialist.

76
BMP Buffers/Field Borders
  • Setbacks and natural treatment area to protect
  • Wells
  • Streams
  • Wetlands
  • Neighbors
  • Grass/forested buffers provide the most
    protection
  • Stream Bank Management
  • Runoff Control
  • Windbreaks

77
Buffers and Separations
  • May be required by state or local regulations
  • Good Practice Recommendations
  • Usually protect/setback
  • Surface water, wetlands
  • Wells
  • Neighbors, churches, schools

78
Riparian Buffers Reduce N and P Loss
Cornfield
80
8
Surface runoff Subsurface flow
60
6
N
P
40
4
20
2
87
79
0
0
N
N
P
P
79
Runoff Control
Buffer between field edges and ditches can reduce
nutrient movement offsite. Grassed waterways can
reduce nutrient movement to ditches, streams, and
rivers.
80
Stream Bank Management
  • Buffers filter/treat
  • Sediment
  • Nutrients
  • Pathogens

Before
After
81
BMP Streambank/Waterway Fencing
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BMPs?
  • Animals with access to surface water can be a
    direct source of pollution.

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Buffers and Field Borders
  • Buffers and field borders should be used to
    reduce animal waste contamination in order to
    protect streams, wetlands, wells, and etc.
  • Buffers and borders can reduce neighborhood
    complaints.
  • Animals should not be allowed access to streams
    and wetlands.
  • Streambank fences can be used to reduce access to
    streams and wetlands.

87
BMP Erosion Control
Terraces, strip cropping, cover crops, etc.
88
BMP Pasture/Crop Management
Healthy crops use more nutrients.
89
Pasture/Crop Management
Poor crop stands can result in inadequate
nutrient uptake
90
Pasture Management
Nutrient management reduces the manure
application rate on grazed pasture because of
recycling.
91
Cover Crops Reduce Erosion and P Loss
No cover crop Cover crop
Annual loss
88
85
70
Erosion tonne/ha/yr
Total P kg/ha/yr
Dissolved P kg/ha/yr
92
BMP Feed Storage
Hay bales should be covered to reduce the
nutrients leaching back into the soil.
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BMP Feeding Management
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Effect of Diet on N, P, and K Excretion
  • N, P, and K excretion varies with amount in diet.
  • Excretion also varies with the level of feed
    intake.
  • It is possible to predict N, P, and K excretion
    based on feed intake, growth rate, level of
    exercise, and performance.

103
Run-in Sheds andExercise Lots
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What is included in a Nutrient Management Plan?
  • Manure handling and storage plan
  • Land application plan
  • Site management plan
  • Record keeping
  • Alternative manure use plan
  • Feed management plan

108
BMP Record Keeping
  • Keep track of manure and fertilizer applications.
  • Keep manure and soil analyses for several years.
  • Consider computer record-keeping programs.
  • Other records rainfall, wind speed and
    direction, lagoon levels, self-inspection forms.

109
Bedding Use
  • Typical materials are sawdust, hay, straw, wood
    shavings, and sand.
  • Be careful when using hard wood shavings (eg.
    black walnut).
  • Typical use scenarios are horse stalls, run-in
    sheds, bedded pack barns, broiler houses, etc.
  • Volume addition due to bedding may be 1/3 to 1/2
    of the original dry bedding volume.
  • Manure tends to fill void spaces between bedding
    material particles.

110
Bedding Characteristics
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Composting
  • Natural aerobic process for stabilizing organic
    matter
  • Well composted manure has humus smell, 25-50
    volume reduction, and destruction of pathogens
    and weed seeds due to heat of composting.

113
Composting
  • Production of a more homogeneous material
  • Final compost is dry making it easier to spread
    and manage
  • May have marketability (mushroom compost, organic
    compost ??)

114
Composting Principles
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Composting Bins
117
Turning Compost
118
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Composted Horse Manure
121
Vermicomposting
  • Earthworms and microorganisms convert organic
    materials into nutrient rich humus called
    vermicompost.
  • Worms separated from the castings or compost
    have high value as animal and aquaculture feed.
  • Techniques range from boxed and outdoor windrows
    to automatic systems.

122
Vermicomposting
  • More than 5 tons/wk of swine manure being vermi-
    composted on a 15 ft by 15 ft concrete pad.
  • Greenhouse trials with ornamental and vegetable
    crops showed increased blooming, larger plants,
    and increased root growth when vermicompost was
    15-35. Plant performance decreased when
    vermicompost was greater.
  • Castings sold in 2-, 10-, and 25-lb bags marked
    "Vermicycle natures ultimate plant food."

123
  • Compost litter/manure to a stable endpoint

124
  • Feed composted litter in livestock feeding
    systems.

125
Anaerobic Digestion
To Fields and Additional Storage
OUT
Digester
Solids Sold
Existing 500 Free Stall Barn
Milking Parlor
DIG
SEP
P
P
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Most Neighbor Complaints Arise from Land
Application
133
Get Along With Neighbors
Reduce Odors Traffic Noise Flies Increase Communi
cations
134
Sources of odors
  • Animals
  • Manure
  • Waste water
  • Feed

135
Environmental Impacts of Odors
  • Community nuisance
  • Psychological impact on neighbors (anger,
    depression, etc.)
  • Physiological impact on neighbors (respiratory
    problems, nausea, etc.)

136
Odors ? Emissions
137
Airborne Emission Sources
1. Housing
2. Storage
3. Land Application
138
Air Emissions--Odor
  • Multiple gases contribute to odor
  • Volatile fatty acids
  • Carbon dioxide and methane
  • Nitrogen containing compounds (ammonia, amines,
    nitrogen heterocycles)
  • Phenols cresols
  • Sulfur-containing compounds

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Odor and Gas Dispersion
Odor and Gas Dispersion
141
Factors Affecting Odor Release and Dispersion
  • Wind speed

2. Area
1. Temperature 2. Wind speed 3. Topography
3. Source concentration
142
BMPs Windbreaks
Reduce odors from manure storages and odor drift
from land application sites
143
Anthropogenic Emissions by Compound and Sector
for the Years 1890 and 1990
In Parentheses total global anthropogenic
emissions.
Taken from Van Aardenne et al., (2001)
144
Typical Lifetimes in the Planetary Boundary Layer
for Pollutants Emitted from Animal Feeding
Operations
Source National Research Council. 2003. Air
Emissions. Washington, DC.
145
(NH3) Ammonia Emissions
  • Produced when urea in urine mixes with bacterial
    urease in feces.
  • Globally 50 of ammonia emissions from animal
    agriculture. 25 comes from agriculture land.
  • Exposure to ammonia has known health effects.
  • Can contribute to ecosystem fertilization,
    acidification and eutrophication.
  • As a bioaerosol, ammonia contributes to PM2.5.
  • Since NH3 and NH4 reside in the atmosphere for a
    matter of days, a regional scale is needed to
    assess environmental effects and control.

Source National Research Council. 2003. Air
Emissions. Washington, DC Van Aardenne et al.,
(2001)
146
Short-Term Exposure to Ammonia
Source National Research Council. 2003. Air
Emissions. Washington, DC.
147
Long-term Exposure to Ammonia
Source National Research Council. 2003. Air
Emissions. Washington, DC.
148
What is Particulate Matter?
  • Particulate matter or PM is the term for
    particles found in the air. This includes dust,
    smoke, dirt, and bioaerosols. Some are large or
    dark enough to be detected as smoke or soot.
    Others can be detected only under a microscope.
  • PM can be directly emitted into the air, from
    cars, trucks, factories, wood-burning,
    tree-cutting, construction, etc.

149
  • PM can also be formed in the air from chemical
    changes of gases as gases react with water vapor,
    sunlight, and other gases in the air to form PM
    complexes.

150
Key PM2.5 Source Categories
Direct Emissions
Precursor Emissions
  • Carbonaceousa,b
  • Residential Wood Burning
  • Managed Burning
  • Non-Road Mobile
  • Wildfires
  • Residential Waste Burning
  • On Road Mobile
  • Power Gen. Coal
  • Boilers (Oil, Gas)
  • Boilers (Wood)
  • Crustal / Metalsb
  • Fugitive Dust
  • Mineral Production
  • Ferrous Metals
  • SOXc
  • Power Gen. (Coal)
  • Power Gen. (Oil)
  • Boilers (Coal)
  • Boilers (Oil)
  • Pulp and Paper
  • NOX
  • On Road Mobile (Gas, Diesel)
  • Non Road Mobile (Diesel)
  • Power Gen. (Coal)
  • Boilers (Gas)
  • Residential (Gas, Oil)
  • Mineral Production
  • NH3
  • Animal Husbandry
  • Fertilizer Application
  • On Road and Non Road
  • Wastewater Treatment
  • Boilers
  • VOCd
  • Biogenics
  • Solvent Use
  • On Road (Gas)
  • Storage and Transportation
  • Residential Wood
  • Petro Industry
  • Waste Disposal

aIncludes organic particles, elemental carbon and
condensible organic particles bImpact of
carbonaceous emissions on ambient PM 5 to 10
times more than crustal emissions
impact cIncludes SO2, and SO3 and H2SO4
condensible inorganics dContributes to formation
of secondary organic aerosols
From Pace and Saeger, OAQPS Emissions Inventory
Conference, Denver, CO, May 2001
151
Particulate Matter Formation
Source USEPA www.epa.gov
152
Particulate Matter Formation
Source USEPA www.epa.gov
153
PM of Animal Origin
  • Can contain dust, fecal matter, feed dust and
    materials, skin cells, and products of microbial
    digestion.
  • May also contain allergens, microorganisms,
    bacterial byproducts, and fungal byproducts.
  • Chemicals of animal origin such as NH3, H2S, NOX,
    and VOCs also contribute to PM.
  • Water vapor.

Source Thorne, Iowa CAFO Air Quality Study,
2002 Kullman et al., 1998
154
Other Emission Materials
  • Dust
  • Pathogens
  • Flies
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