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1. Animal Waste ManagementIntroduction and BMPs
2. Animal Production in the United States Broilers 7.6 Billion (1996)
Turkeys 300 Million (1996)
Swine 103 Million (1995)
Dairy Cows 9.2 Million (1996)
Beef Cattle 101 Million (1996)
Sheep 7.9 Million (1996)
3. North Carolina Animal Production
4. Animal Wastes and Pollutants Oxygen Demand (BOD5)
Nutrients
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Others (Cu, Zn)
Bacteria
Viruses
Sediment
5. Livestock Manure and Nutrient ProductionAnnual Production per Animal (lbs.)
9. Nitrogen
10. Phosphorus
11. Animal Waste Management BMPs Waste Management Plans
Education
Handling
Storage
Treatment
Application
Animal Moralities
Inspections
12. Farm Certification and Permits Clean Water Act (1974) - USEPA
NPDES (National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System)
CAFO (Confined Animal Feeding Operation)
States must develop a plan to meet or exceed federal NPDES guidelines or EPA will issue permits
NC Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DEHR)
NPDES permits are administered by the Division of Water Quality (DWQ)
13. Federal CAFO Thresholds(Based on 1,000 Animal Units) 1,000 slaughter or feeder cattle
700 mature cattle (dry or milking)
2,500 swine (> 55 pounds)
500 horses
10,000 sheep or lambs
55,000 turkeys
30,000 hens or broilers (liquid systems only)
5,000 ducks
14. NC Thresholds 250 head of swine (regardless of size)
100 head of cattle (in confinement)
beef or dairy
75 horses
1,000 sheep
30,000 chickens (liquid systems only)
Confinement = animals held >45 days or can cannot support permanent vegetation
15. Eight Components of NC’s Animal Waste Management Plans General Permit - Issued by DWQ for all farms over the threshold numbers
waste application rates
record keeping
waste and soil testing
emergency management plans
riparian buffers
animal mortality management
insect control checklists
odor control checklists
16. NC Dry Litter Waste Plans Poultry farms, using dry litter, with >30,000 birds must develop a Dry Litter Management Plan
Non-certified plan
Waste & soil testing
Monitor Cu & Zn levels
Balance litter application with crop nitrogen requirement
Record Keeping
NC Cooperative Extension Service is educated producers on how they can develop their own plans
17. Animal Waste System Operator Certification NC - First state to require operators to be certified
Operator in Charge - required on every farm
Other states have implemented both voluntary or mandatory programs
OH, OK, IL, NE, MN,TX, SK & BC - Canada
18. NC Senate Bill 974 - 1995 Required operators of swine waste systems, greater than 250 head of swine, to be certified
To be certified an operator must:
Complete 6 hours of classroom training
Pass a certification exam
Pay a $10 annual fee
Training program was developed and implemented by NC Cooperative Extension Service in cooperation with state agencies and members of the swine industry
19. Senate Bill 1217 - 1996 Required operators of animal waste management systems, to be certified
greater than 250 confined hogs, 100 confined cattle, 75 confined horses, 1,000 sheep or 30,000 poultry (liquid systems)
To be certified an operator must:
Complete 10 hours of classroom training
Pass a certification exam
Pay a $10 annual fee
Complete 6 hours of additional training every 3 years
20. Program Successes SB974 Program
4,200 citizens completed 6-hours of training
3,800 citizens passed the certification exam
88% passing rate
3,200 swine waste operators, paid $10 fee, and became certified
21. Program Successes SB 1217 Program
Completed one of three sets of exams
To date, 250 swine, dairy, and liquid-based poultry system operators have been certified
Passing rate of 93%
22. Waste Handling The method of manure handling has the most impact on:
how the material can be stored
how the material can be treated
how it may be land applied
how much area is needed to properly handle the material
the relative value of the manure as a fertilizer
the cost on constructing and operating the waste system
23. Waste Handling Dry Litter
Solid
separated solids
compost
Semi-Solid
Slurry
Liquid
24. Dry Litter Systems Primarily used in poultry production
Applications for swine and cattle
Litter bed for absorption and insulation
wood chips, peanut or rice hulls, shredded paper
25. Solids Separation Gravity or Mechanical
Reduce organic loading to storage or treatment unit
Reduce liquid manure volume and N content
Flexibility in application
Possible odor reduction
Compost or direct application
Value-added products
26. Composting Aerobic biological process to treat organic wastes
C:N and % Moisture
Volume, odor and nutrient reduction
Land application, soil amendment
Marketing and quality control are limiting factors for off-farm use
27. Semi-Solid Manure Handling Daily removal of manure
smaller dairies
Longer term removal
western US beef feedlots
dry climates
limited runoff
Minimal equipment required
Limited storage of manure
Difficult to apply manure 365-days a year
28. Slurry Waste Handling Very nutrient rich liquid
Direct storage of feces, urine, bedding and excess water
dairies
mid-west swine
Tank spreaders, irrigation or injection
Can be odors, especially if land applied without injection or incorporation
29. Liquid Waste Handling Water is a substitute for mechanical or human energy
Flush systems
treatment systems
anaerobic
aerobic
creates best production environment for confined animals
Irrigation
30. Manure Storage Solid
Uncovered piles
Covered piles
Roofed storage structures
Liquid
Earthen
Above-ground tanks
31. Treatment of Animal Waste BOD,
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Pathogens
3rd Law of Thermodynamics
Nothing is created or destroyed, just transformed
32. Treatment Processes Aerobic Systems
Anaerobic
Digesters
Lagoons
Composting
Constructed Lagoons
Land Application
33. Aerobic Treatment Systems Mechanical or passive aeration to supply BOD requirement of wastewater
BION
activated sludge systems
Large amounts of biomass (sludge) is formed
Nutrient removal achieved to sludge removal or separate denitrification system
Oxygen needed for nitrification is roughly 4 times that required for BOD treatment
Can be expensive to construct and operate
34. Anaerobic Waste Treatment Organic degradation through anaerobic digestion
Lagoons
Engineered systems
Produce gases
CO2, CH4, NH3, NO2, N2
Production is very season and site-specific
Digesters
Capture biogas for combustion
Concentrates liquid wastewater
35. Anaerobic Lagoon Schematic
36. Lagoon Liners Clay
NRCS SNTC Technical Note 716
0.028 ft/day, >1 ft thick
existing of imported clay
Synthetic Liners
PVC
Polypropylene
Hypalon
HDPE
Concrete
37. Composting Aerobic bacterial decomposition
Naturally occurring process
Volume reduction
Nutrient reduction
Odor control
Pathogen destruction due to high temperatures
38. Constructed Wetlands Natural wetlands have the ability to treat and assimilate wastes
BOD treatment
Nutrient reduction
Denitrification
Soil and plant adsorption
Plant uptake
39. Treatment Processes of Land Application Nutrients
Plant uptake
Adsorption/binding
Volatilization
Pathogens
Immobilization
Bacteria degradation
Killing or rendered inert by:
oxygen, UV light, drying
40. Land Application Agronomic Rates
Priority nutrient (N or P)
Realistic Yield Expectation
“Only apply that nutrient amount which the crop can utilize” - based on the expected crop yield
Nutrient removal achieved by crop harvest
Many states also plan for residual organic nitrogen
Equipment Calibration
Insure application rates and patterns
41. Animal Mortality Management Burial
Landfills
Direst Feeding - alligator production
Incineration
Digestion
Composting
Rendering
42. Farm Inspections NC - two inspections or “reviews” are conducted annually on every farm over the animal threshold
Division of Water Quality
regulatory review and site inspections
record keeping
Division of Soil and Water Conservation
operational review
access the need for technical assistance
Both inspections use the same form
43. 1997 Inspections - Overview Inspections
3,375 DWQ Inspections
2,662 DSWC Reviews
650 S&WCD Reviews
410 Freeboard violations (statewide - all animals)
Discharges - 77 total
56 Dairy
19 Swine
2 Poultry
44. Fines - 1997 128 cases assessed
31 were dismissed
Fines
$10,000 per day maximum
$193,290.29 - Total
Range: $200 - $12,638.64
No record keeping violations
45. Other Sources of Information Certification Training for Operators of Animal Waste Management Systems (NC - AG538 A/B)
Livestock Waste Facilities Handbook (MWPS-18)
Web sites
Ag Statistics:
US: www.usda.gov/nass/
NC: www.agr.state.nc.us/stats
Animal Waste:
U of Minn:. www.bae.umn.edu/extens/manure/manure.html
NCSU: www.bae.ncsu.edu/bae/programs/extension/manure/awm.html
NCSU Soils:ces.soil.ncsu.edu/soilscience/programs/index.htm
46. Animal Waste ManagementIntroduction and BMPs