290 likes | 496 Views
Background. USA:81.8 million acres Corn in 2006, 86 mil. acres by 2012Corn prices exceed $6.00/bu, Soybeans $12.50/buLand currently under CRP contract for the 2008 crop year: 34.66 million acres, down 2.11 million acres from 36.77 million acres in 2007. States with the largest CRP declines: Nort
E N D
1. A Risk Evaluation of Nitrate Loading to Groundwater Supplies in Freeborn County: a biofuel production modeling study
2. Background USA:
81.8 million acres Corn in 2006, 86 mil. acres by 2012
Corn prices exceed $6.00/bu, Soybeans $12.50/bu
Land currently under CRP contract for the 2008 crop year: 34.66 million acres, down 2.11 million acres from 36.77 million acres in 2007.
States with the largest CRP declines: North Dakota and South Dakota, with losses of 400,000 and 248,000 acres, respectively.
3. Background Minnesota:
1997: 10% ethanol blend; 2005: 2% biodiesel blend
2013: 20% ethanol blend proposed
In 2008, 1 billion gallons Ethanol, 25% of corn crop
CO2 emissions 31% 1990-2005, mostly from driving
1.83 million acres in CRP – 70,000 acres expire in 2010
Freeborn County:
Number of farms: 1,172 in 2002, 1,193 in 1997 (-2% )
Land in farms: 394,408 acres in 2002, 376,923 acres in 1997 (5% )
Average farm size: 337 acres in 2002, 316 acres in 1997 (7% )
6071 acres in CRP – 500 acres expire in 2010
5. Health Concerns Well water in rural communities
Nitrate leaching to sensitive aquifers ? health risks.
Safe drinking water MCL:
10 ppm nitrate-N (SDWA 1974)
6. Agricultural BMPs and Local Management Fall application of manure and fertilizer N common
Loss of CRP acres
20-50 lbs/ac fertilizer N trimmed without corn yield loss (MDA FANMAP study, 1999)
Annual crop systems in 10 year time of travel for wells in many rural water supply districts
14. Objective of Study Use the computer simulation model GLEAMS and Geographic Information Systems software (ArcGIS) to identify areas of concern and explore alternative management systems for farmland adapting to the new Biofuel initiatives.
16. GLEAMS (Groundwater Loading Effects of Agricultural Management Systems) One-dimensional, field-scale, continuous flow model
Evaluate effects of agricultural management systems on chemical and nutrient movement
17. Model Parameters Nutrient:
crop management, fertility, timing, field operations
Hydrology:
soil parameters, mean monthly max. and min. temps, planting and harvest dates, irrigation rates, daily precipitation summaries
Erosion:
field parameters (slope, contour, curve numbers, % cover, K values)
18. Model Calibration/Validation
20. Treatments Precipitation: 10 years of continuous data (1996-2005)
Multiple soil types based on county soil survey
Two crops: Continuous Corn and Corn-Soybean rotation
Dryland (no irrigation) and model applied irrigation
Fertilizer application: 150 lb./ac. on Continuous Corn, and 100 lb./ac. on Corn in Corn-Soybean rotation
21. Digital Soils Data
26. Results U of M Extension in Freeborn County can use results, in conjunction with farmers, to revise Best Management Practices (BMPs) currently in use
Possible solutions include:
Retention of lands enrolled in conservation programs (CRP, CREP, easements, etc.)
Reduce amount of N present in leachate/runoff, i.e. less fertilizer, follow current BMPs, spring application
Conversion of annual-cropped areas of concern to perennial crops
27. Annual vs. Perennial Crops Annual
less water use
short growing season
non-legumes need fertilizer N
have moderate N uptake capacity
limited tolerance for saturated rootzone Perennial
more water use
longer growing season
normally don’t need fertilizer N (legumes, CRP)
some have high N uptake capacity
some tolerate saturated rootzones
28. Continuous corn and corn/soybean are leakyPerennials are not (usually)
29. Conclusions Simulation models + GIS can:
adequately estimate mass of leachable NO3-N
ID and delineate areas of concern
conduct condition-specific examinations
locate areas most likely to benefit from intervention
guide recommendations for watershed management districts or CRP program enrollment
BMPs for these areas should be re-examined
? acreage of annual crops results in ? nitrate-loading to sensitive groundwater systems
30. Next Steps Couple simulation model output to GIS:
GLEAMS model output now extracted by Excel macro, brought into GIS in multi-step process
Include student assistance in developing GIS layers, especially SSURGO soils, for more MN counties
Incorporate updated CRP data into study areas