Pesticide and Environmental Update
Barnyard
Deodorant- Alum Curbs Phosphorus Runoff and More
Poultry litter—a mixture of chicken manure, feathers, spilled food,
and bedding material—is an inexpensive and popular fertilizer because it
contains nitrogen and phosphorus. But applying more fertilizer than a crop
needs can lead to buildup of phosphorus in the soil. Runoff from these
fields can increase populations of blue-green algae and undesirable
aquatic plants that rob water of oxygen, causing fish kills and odor and
taste problems in municipal water supplies.
An exciting development from Agricultural Research Service scientists
shows that poultry litter doesn’t have to be a significant pollution
source if proper application guidelines are followed.
Testing a Low-Cost Solution
In 1992, Philip Moore, a soil scientist in the ARS Poultry Production
and Product Safety Research Unit at Fayetteville, Arkansas, first
discovered that alum (aluminum sulfate) applied to poultry litter greatly
reduces phosphorus runoff from pastures. Alum binds to phosphate, forming
aluminum phosphate, which is less susceptible to losses in runoff.
Soon after, Moore found that alum could reduce ammonia emissions in
poultry houses. A patent was granted for alum-treatment of poultry litter
in 1997, and it was licensed and commercially marketed the following year.
Although alum’s short-term benefits are now well documented, its
long-term effects are not. That’s why Moore and Dwayne Edwards, an
agricultural engineer at the University of Kentucky-Lexington, began two
20-year studies in the mid-1990s to evaluate the effects of alum.
The researchers are studying paired 1-acre watersheds in a commercial
beef and broiler chicken operation, along with 52 small plots on
university land. They’re comparing nutrient runoff following
applications of alum-treated poultry litter, untreated poultry litter, and
ammonium nitrate, the most common commercial nitrogen fertilizer.
The two watersheds, separated by earthen berms, are similar in size,
slope, and land cover and receive uniform treatment. Every time it rains,
runoff volume is automatically monitored and runoff samples are taken.
Technician Scott Becton (left) and soil scientist Philip Moore collect
runoff water samples from a long-term paired watershed study being
conducted in northwest Arkansas to measure phosphorus runoff from
alum-treated poultry litter. (D645-1)
Working Wonders for Soil, Water, Air
The results of the first 10 years of the study are now in, and the news
is better than expected: Applying alum-treated litter reduced phosphorus
runoff by 75 percent at the watershed scale and as much as 87 percent from
the small plots.
Researchers also found that alum reduced ammonia levels in poultry
houses by about 70 percent. This is important because ammonia reduces
birds’ weight and makes them more susceptible to viruses. And alum is
known to reduce pathogens in litter and on birds, further contributing to
a healthier environment for both workers and birds.
Field trials conducted at commercial broiler farms in conjunction with
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency showed that alum lowered litter
pH during the first 3 to 4 weeks of chick growth. The lower pH resulted in
less ammonia evaporating, or volatilizing, from the litter. Laboratory
studies confirmed that alum is one of the most effective compounds for
reducing ammonia volatilization.
“Less ammonia means healthier, heavier birds,” Moore says. “It
also leads to lower energy bills because less ventilation is needed.”
Good for Crops, Too
During the sixth year of the 20-year study, Moore noticed severe yield
reductions in tall fescue fertilized with ammonium nitrate. He found that
the cause was aluminum toxicity. But why would ammonium nitrate—which
contains no aluminum—cause aluminum toxicity?
“Aluminum availability in soil is not controlled by the total amount
of aluminum present,” Moore explains, “but by the soil’s chemical
conditions, particularly pH.” Ammonium nitrate acidified the soil—lowered
its pH—and increased aluminum’s availability in the soil.
On the other hand, applications of either untreated or alum-treated
poultry litter raised soil pH, which reduced aluminum’s availability,
compared to unfertilized controls. Although alum applications initially
lower the pH of the litter, the manure from the birds increases that pH
over time to around 7.5.
Forage yields were higher with alum-treated litter than with untreated
poultry litter or ammonium nitrate, and use of alum didn’t affect
aluminum uptake by plants or aluminum runoff.
“Yieldsof tall fescue fertilized with alum-treated litter were
higher,” Moore says. “Grass tissue analyses indicated that the good
yields were due to increased nitrogen availability, since alum-treated
litter contains more nitrogen than untreated litter. We hypothesized that
this was because of reduced ammonia volatilization.”
In previous studies by Moore and colleagues, alum-treated litter
reduced runoff of heavy metals—such as arsenic, copper, and zinc—by
about 40-50 percent and of naturally occurring estrogen by 42 percent.
This research indicates that alum-treated poultry litter can be a
long-term, sustainable solution to the phosphorus runoff problem. Alum is
one of the few cost-effective “best management practices” that
improves air, soil, and water quality while increasing both poultry
production and crop yields. Each year, over 600 million broilerchickens
are grown with alum, and its use is rapidly expanding.—By Jim Core,
formerly with ARS.
This research is part of Manure and Byproduct Utilization, an ARS
National Program (#206) described on the World Wide Web at
www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Philip A. Moore, Jr., is in the USDA-ARS Poultry Production and Product
Safety Research Unit, University of Arkansas, Plant Sciences Bldg., Room
115, Fayetteville, AR 72701; phone (479) 575-5724, fax (479) 575-7465.
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