Literature DB >> 28017419

Integrating remote sensing with nutrient management plans to calculate nitrogen parameters for swine CAFOs at the sprayfield and sub-watershed scales.

Elizabeth C Christenson1, Marc L Serre2.   

Abstract

North Carolina (NC) regulates swine concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) using five-year nutrient management plans (NMPs) requiring the plant available nitrogen sprayed (PANspray) to be less than that utilized by crops (PANcrops), i.e. the PAN balance (defined as PANbal=PANspray-PANcrops) remains negative, which avoids over-spraying liquid effluent onto crops. Objectives of this research are first to characterize Duplin County sprayfields and PANbal by creating the first, open-source sprayfield spatial database created for swine CAFOs in NC (for Duplin County). Second, this paper finds that for two sub-watershed scales 199 additional catchments and 1 additional HUC12 were identified as having permitted lagoon effluent applied compared to using CAFO point locations for a total of 510 catchments and 34 HUC12s with swine CAFO sprayfields. Third, a new method disaggregates annual PANbal from NMPs using remote sensing crop data. And finally, probability that sprayfields have excess PANbal is estimated due to k, a PAN availability coefficient. The remote sensing approach finds that 9-14% of catchments in a given year and 24% of catchments over a five year period have a positive PANbal. An additional 3-4% of catchments have probability of a positive PANbal due to variability in k. This work quantifies the impact of crop rotations on of sprayfields at the catchment spatial scale with respect to PANbal and highlights some of the limitations of NMPs have for estimation of PANbal. We recommend that NMPs be permitted based on the crop rotation scenario utilizing the least PAN and that swine producer compliance to manure management practice be encouraged.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Concentrated animal feeding operations; Nutrient management; Plant available nitrogen; Sprayfield; Swine

Year:  2016        PMID: 28017419      PMCID: PMC5326586          DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.12.033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  8 in total

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3.  Farmers' use of nutrient management: lessons from watershed case studies.

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4.  Tracing nitrate transport and environmental impact from intensive swine farming using delta nitrogen-15.

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5.  Environmental injustice in North Carolina's hog industry.

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7.  Nitrate variability in groundwater of North Carolina using monitoring and private well data models.

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8.  Persistence of livestock-associated antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus among industrial hog operation workers in North Carolina over 14 days.

Authors:  Maya Nadimpalli; Jessica L Rinsky; Steve Wing; Devon Hall; Jill Stewart; Jesper Larsen; Keeve E Nachman; Dave C Love; Elizabeth Pierce; Nora Pisanic; Jean Strelitz; Laurel Harduar-Morano; Christopher D Heaney
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  8 in total

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