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Maximum Liquid Manure Spreading Rates on Sloping Land Ron Fleming and Malcolm MacAlpine University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus CSBE09-502
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Funding Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food & Rural Affairs – Nutrient Management Research Program
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Background Nutrient Management Act sets limits on spreading rates based on: ◦ Land slope ◦ Hydrologic Soil Group ◦ Application method (e.g. incorporated) ◦ Distance to surface water
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Factors influencing runoff risk: Soil texture Soil structure Land slope Soil management Vegetative cover Soil moisture level Risk of rainfall after spreading Frost in soil Manure DM Rate of application Application method
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Objectives Develop maximum land application rates for liquid manure. Assess the impact of post application rainfall events on runoff on different field slopes Propose maximum land application rates on pre-tilled and un-tilled land surfaces
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Setup Small plots HSG = C 1 m x 1 m in 2007 1 m x 4 m in 2008 Swine & dairy manure & water Pre-tilled vs un-tilled 3 rates – 47, 94, 140 m 3 /ha Surface applied
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Plot Layout in 2008 Slope Plots 1 m wide by 4 m long – manure on 3 m length
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Setup - 2007 FactorsNumberDetails Liquid applied3Swine, dairy, water Land slope33 to 5%, 6 to 8%, > 9% Application rate346.7, 93.5 and 140.2 m 3 /ha Tillage2Un-tilled vs tilled Replications3 Total plots162
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Setup - 2008 FactorsNumberDetails Liquid applied3Swine, dairy, water Land slope33 to 5%, 6 to 8%, > 9% Application rate346.7, 93.5 and 140.2 m 3 /ha Tillage2Un-tilled vs tilled Setback30 cm, 50 cm, 100 cm Replications3 Total plots486
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Site 07-1, un-tilled section, 2.9% slope
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Site 07-1, tilled section, 2.7% slope
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Manure application - 2008
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Rainfall simulation (in 2007) 1 in 5 year storm (25.5 mm in 30 minutes) 24 hours after manure applied On 2/3 of plots
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Results Spreading after wheat harvest in August & September Soil: silt loam – mostly HSG C Dairy manure: >6% DM Swine manure: <3% DM
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Sites 07-1 and 08-1: 2.5 to 3.0% slope Sites 07-2 and 08-2: 4.7 to 6.8% slope Sites 07-3 and 08-3: 9.2 to 15.2% slope
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Results – Runoff
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Results - Slope In general, the greater the slope, the greater the average volume of runoff
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Results - Tillage Pre-tillage did not lead to a “significant” reduction in the volume of liquid runoff in 2007 – but it did in 2008 at the 2 steeper sloping sites ◦ E.g. Site 08-3 ◦ pre-tilled – mean runoff = 828 mL ◦ un-tilled - mean runoff = 2360 mL
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Results – Liquid Applied Swine manure (DM 6%) in both years
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Runoff volume – 2007 - all plots
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Runoff volume – 2008 - all plots
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Results – Application rate In general, the higher the application rate, the greater the volume of runoff ◦ E.g. 2008, Setback = 0 cm ◦ Applic. rate 140 m 3 /ha; runoff = 1730 mL ◦ Applic. rate 94 m 3 /ha; runoff = 1130 mL ◦ Applic. rate 47 m 3 /ha; runoff = 280 mL
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Results - Rainfall Rainfall within 24 hours of spreading: ◦ Runoff liquid is dilute but represents a pollution risk ◦ Volume is un-related to initial liquid ◦ Volume is related to degree of saturation (i.e. initial application rate)
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Results – Setback Distance Runoff was greatest where setback was 0 cm At Site 08-1, no liquid moved 50 cm downslope At Site 08-3, no significant difference in runoff as setback changed – quite variable
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Conclusions The higher the application rate the greater the chance of runoff But – some rates tested were higher than allowed by the Nutrient Management plan The steeper the slope, the greater the chance of runoff Pre-tillage reduced the risk of runoff
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Conclusions (Cont.) Any method used to predict maximum rates (before runoff occurs) needs to consider: ◦ Dry matter of the liquid applied ◦ Slope of land ◦ Application rate ◦ Pre-tillage
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Conclusions (Cont.) Of less importance: ◦ HSG (esp. for high DM manures) ◦ Soil vegetation cover ◦ Direction of tillage/cropping
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Questions
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