Goat FAQs header

Where you can not only
 "get your goat" but find 
"all things goat" as well!
GoatConnection.com
TheWholeGoatCatalog.com

Buy Goat Products & Gifts!



Service of
Khimaira Farm


Last Updated: Jun 11th, 2008 - 22:41:01 
Articles - Home 
About - In The News
Alternative Medicine
Anatomy
Announcements - News
Biosecurity
CAEV
Caseous Lymphadenitis
Collecting tissue and other samples
Color Descriptions
Commercial Dairying
Culling
Digestive System
Drugs - Dosages/Uses
Eyes
Feeds & Feeding
Fencing
Fly control
Genetic Disorders-Discussion
Getting Your Goat
Glossary
Grants
Guard Animals
Health Values
Herd Health and Management
Housing
Kid Care
Lameness
Listeriosis
Mammary Glands
Meat Operations & Processing
Milk and Meat Products
Muscular System
Mycoplasmas
Nervous System
Parasites
Poisonous Plants
Polio - polioencephalomalacia
Pregnancy Care & Concerns
Reproductive System
Respiratory System
Scrapie
Skin Conditions
Tattoo
Travel-Shipping Regulations
Urinary
Waste Management
Weights Measures Conversions
Youth-4-H
Organizations-Effectively participating



Waste Management

Keeping nutrients in manure
By Lupe Chavez
Oct 28, 2002, 10:07pm

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
Keeping Nutrients in Manure

ARS News Service
Agricultural Research Service, USDA
Lupe Chavez, (301) 504-1627,
ljchavez@ars.usda.gov
October 3, 2001
Manure-treating practices that reduce ammonia emissions and preserve nitrogen in the manure for plant use have been developed by Agricultural Research Service scientists. The treatments reduced ammonia release by more than 55 percent overall. Nitrogen is lost from manure when ammonia, a nitrogen-containing compound in the manure, escapes to the atmosphere through a process called volatilization. The loss of nitrogen makes the manure less useful as a fertilizer.

Alan Lefcourt and John Meisinger, colleagues at the ARS Animal and Natural Resources Institute in Beltsville, Md., conducted tests to improve the retention of manure nitrogen for organic use. They found that adding 2.5 percent alum or 6.25 percent zeolite to manure slurry by wet weight reduced ammonia loss by 60 and 55 percent, respectively.

Alum and zeolite, acidifying and sequestering agents, helped reduce the formation of ammonia gas and its volatilization, or release, into the air.
Alum lowered the pH level of the tested dairy slurry below 5, a level that limits the amount of ammonia released from the manure. Zeolite, commonly used in kitty litter, acted as a cation-exchange medium, binding with the chemicals that would form ammonia and preventing volatilization.

To measure ammonia loss, the researchers utilized a canopy and wind-tunnel system. A variable-speed fan pulled air over the manure samples and ammonia gases were trapped in acid bottles as they passed through the system. Ammonia losses were measured over a period of 96 hours.

Lefcourt and Meisinger initiated their research in response to problems
created by increased animal production on farms and dwindling land available for spreading manure as fertilizer. Crop plants can take up and use the nitrogen and phosphorus in the manure. However, when too much nitrogen escapes into the air, excess phosphorus is left in the manure and soil. By limiting ammonia losses from manure, the team of scientists can create better ratios of nitrogen to phosphorus for farm crops. Moreover, zeolite-treated slurries are also a nitrogen-rich, slow-release, fertilizer.

Treating dairy slurry with either alum or zeolite is cost-effective and
safe. Slurries treated with alum would cost less than 50 cents a day per lactating cow. Zeolite costs should be similar, although volume pricing is not currently available.

ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research
agency. At the ARS Animal and Natural Resources Institute, Lefcourt works in the Instrumentation and Sensing Laboratory
(
http://www.barc.usda.gov/anri/isl/index.htm). Meisinger works in the
institute's Environmental Quality Laboratory (
http://www.barc.usda.gov/anri/eql/).

***Information - Service of GoatConnection.com - Khimaira***

Top of Page

Waste Management
Latest Headlines
Composting Livestock Mortalities
MANAGING SHEEP AND GOAT MANURE
NPK Values in manures
Manure And Wastewater Management Guide
Keeping nutrients in manure
Composted manures- yield and disease resistance benefits