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Conservation Buffers to Minimize Pesticide Losses

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... need to increase water infiltration and max. contact with soil and vegetation. ... of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326W, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conservation Buffers to Minimize Pesticide Losses


1
Conservation Buffers to Minimize Pesticide Losses
  • One more reason to promote buffers!

2
Buffer impacts...
  • Trap sediment (and adsorbed and absorbed
    pesticides)
  • Slow runoff (for sheet flow)
  • Increase infiltration
  • Biological degradation
  • Cuts down on drift and overspraying

3
Many studies...
  • Trapping efficiencies of 50 or more
  • Increasing water infiltration is the most
    important factor in trapping pesticides
  • Without buffers, edge of field losses can range
    from 1 to as much as 10

4
Not the total solution
  • Conservation buffers are not a substitute for
    careful pesticide selection and use
  • They are a tool to further improve water
    qualitywhen used along with other practices

5
Types of buffers...
  • Grassed waterways
  • Contour buffer strips
  • Vegetative barriers
  • Tile inlet buffers
  • Field borders
  • Filter strips and filter areas
  • Riparian forest buffers

6
Other specialty buffers...
  • Constructed wetlands
  • Windbreaks shelterbelts
  • Cross wind trap strips
  • Herbaceous wind barriers
  • Set-aside and special use areas (CRP fields, wood
    lots, diversion backslopes, ditchbanks, wildlife
    habitat plantings)

7
Pesticide trapping...
  • Function of how tightly the pesticides are
    adsorbed to soil particles (Koc)
  • Pesticides with low Koc values (generally less
    than 500) tend to move more in water that on
    sediment
  • To trap low Koc pesticides effectively, buffers
    need to increase water infiltration and max.
    contact with soil and vegetation.

8
Some research results...
9
Designing buffers for efficient pesticide
trapping...
  • location, location, location
  • water must run through the system by sheet flow,
    not concentrated flow
  • grading may be necessary
  • maintenance should be planned
  • wider strips encourage sheetflow and infiltration
  • most effective at the top of the watershed!

10
Considerations...
  • greatest volume of runoff enters the watershed
    from the small streams
  • intermittent and 1st and 2nd order streams
    require more buffer protection
  • relatively little new water enters 3rd and 4th
    order streams over banks
  • buffers along larger streams have many other
    benefits but less for pesticide interception and
    water quality

11
Dealing withconcentrated flow...
  • level spreaders
  • grading
  • waterbars
  • vegetated barriers perpendicular to the flow
  • remove the natural berms along the field edge

12
How wide?
  • subject of considerable debate
  • factors
  • soil type (drainage, permeability, zone of
    seasonal saturation, organic matter)
  • antecendent moisture
  • soil structure and compaction
  • climate and storm events
  • slope
  • condition of vegetation, etc.

13
Research findings...
  • 10 to 650 feet
  • under most conditions at least 50 feet
  • NRCS draft standard
  • min. 30 ft. for trapping sediment and adsorbed
    pesticides
  • wider is not always better, depends on soils,
    climate, vegetation, pesticide!
  • Relatively narrow buffers can still have big
    impacts (narrow is better than none)

14
Check this web site...
  • www.ftw.nrcs.usda.gov/tpham/buffer/akey.htm
  • offers assistance in selection and sizing of
    buffers
  • NRCS standards specificationswww.ftw.nrcs.usda
    .gov/nhcp_2.html

15
Vegetation
  • many options
  • zonation considerations
  • 3 zone riparian buffer
  • Zone 1 undisturbed forest (closest to stream)
  • Zone 2 management forest
  • Zone 3 vegetative filter for runoff control
  • maintenance considerations

16
Economics...
  • giving up land
  • incentive payments
  • tax exemptions
  • cost of installation and maintenance
  • some limited income potential
  • environmental and good neighbor benefits
  • may be a compliance requirement

17
Maintenance matters...
  • periodic sediment removal
  • mowing (at proper height)
  • harvest to remove accumulated nutrients
  • potential reseeding
  • avoid overspraying
  • avoid use as turning areas and driveways
  • weed insect control

18
Integrating bufferswith other BMPs
  • contour farming
  • stripcropping
  • crop rotation
  • terraces
  • detention ponds
  • irrigation timing
  • irrigation water management
  • compaction reduction
  • IPM
  • pesticide selection
  • pesticide timing
  • banded applications
  • soil incorporation (?)
  • conservation tillage
  • nutrient management
  • subsurface drainage

19
Many references available
  • NRCS/SWCD offices
  • Banks and Buffers, A Guide to Selecting Native
    Plants for Streambanks and Shorelines. Tennessee
    Valley Authority. CD-ROM. Call 423-751-7338
  • Watch for Conservation Buffers to Reduce
    Pesticide Losses (NRCS)
  • www.nhq.nrcs.usda.gov/CCS/Buffers.html

20
For an Electronic Copy
Conservation Buffers to Reduce Pesticide
Losses NRCS National Water and Climate Centers
website http//www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov go to
/water/quality/common/pestmgt/files/newconbuf.pdf
21
Non-discrimination statement
  • The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA
    prohibits discrimination in all of its programs
    and activities on the basis of race, color,
    national origin, gender, religion, age,
    disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation
    and marital or family status. (Not all prohibited
    bases apply to all programs.) Persons with
    disabilities who require alternative means for
    communication of program information (Braille,
    large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact
    USDAs TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice or
    TDD).
  • To file a complaint of discrimination, write
    USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room
    326W, Whitten Building, 14th Independence Ave.,
    SW. Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (202)
    720-5964 (voice or TDD). USDA is an equal
    opportunity provider and employer.
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