1. Trends in Recoverable Manure Nutrients
Noel Gollehon USDA - NRCS
Robert Kellogg (retired, USDA – NRCS)
David Moffitt (retired, USDA – NRCS)
Presentation for SWCS Annual Conference
Lombard, Illinois
July 28, 2014
2. Goals of Presentation
• Provide some basic, fundamental information
about livestock and manure nutrient production
– At the National level and
– Distribution across the Nation
• Look at the trends over a 25-year history
(1982-2007) to see the changes in
– Where animals are located.
– Quantities of manure produced
– Quantities of nutrients in the manure.
3. Sources of fertilizer nutrients
Manure Manure
Commercial Commercial
Source: U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1136
4. Background
• Nutrients added to the environment are a
significant portion of the agricultural water
quality discussion.
– Manure is not everywhere, but where animals occur
the levels can be significant.
• Provisions to improve manure management are
a component to almost every water quality
improvement plan in animal production areas.
• EPA as a part of the National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES), regulates a subset of
Animal Feeding Operations (AFOs) termed CAFOs
(Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations).
5. Data and Methods
• Data
– Individual producer responses from the 1982–2007
Census of Agriculture data collection efforts
– Data aggregated to protect individual responses
– Start with 2.2 million farm observations
• Methods
– Consistent approach over time, adjusted for
technological change
– Approach built on methods used in Kellogg et al.,
2000 and Gollehon et al., 2001 reports
6. Estimation Approach
1. Number of animals reported by producers on the
Census form, both inventory and sales.
2. Engineering coefficients (ASABE) of manure and
manure nutrients produced by weight class of animals.
3. Using animal data and common production practices
estimate the quantity of manure and manure nutrients
produced by AFO, AFO-CAFO, and non-AFO farms.
4. Estimate the potential to utilize manure produced on
the farm, based on the uptake of nutrients for on-farm
crop production.
5. Estimate the potential to utilize manure produced in the
county based on the uptake of nutrients for crop
production.
6. Summarize for farm, county, HUC-6, State, and Nation
7. Findings
• Approach produces a lot of numbers!
• Present some of the National-scale information today.
• Present only the Nitrogen information. Matching
Phosphorus is calculated but time today is short.
• Additional information is in the report under development
on this effort. It is at the review stage.
• To prevent disclosure of individual farmer information,
not all information used in calculations will be available.
• Please contact me if you would like to be notified when
the report is publically available.
11. AFO Farm type definitions
• Large AFO-CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operations)
– 700 or more head of dairy cows, 1,000 or more head of fattened
cattle, 2,500 or more breeding hogs, 125,000 or more chicken
broilers
• Medium AFO-CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operations)
– 200-700 head of dairy cows, 300-1,000 head of fattened cattle,
750-2,500 breeding hogs, 37,500-125,000 chicken broilers
• Small AFO
– More than 35 AU (35,000 pounds of live animal weight) but
smaller than a Medium AFO-CAFO
• Very Small AFO
– Less than 35 AU
23. Change in location of recoverable manure
from confined animals, 1982-2007
1982-2007
24. Non-Recoverable Manure
• Report estimates non-recoverable manure nitrogen
– Distributes non-recoverable into 6 types
– Estimate 31% of non recoverable is lost from AFOs during
manure treatment, storage, collection, and transfer.
– Estimate 30% of non recoverable is lost from non-AFOs.
– Remaining 39% of non recoverable is lost to volatilization and a
the non-recoverable fraction of manure on AFOs (cannot collect
it all)
• Report also estimates non-recoverable manure
phosphorus
33. Conclusions
• Total animal weight (AU) about constant over 25
year period (1982-2007)
– Only slight changes in total manure nutrients excreted
• Significant changes in quantity & location of
recoverable manure nutrients.
– Increase in concentration of animals and nutrients on
large CAFOs (lesser extent on medium CAFOs)
• Current permitting policy covers most
recoverable nutrients
– Estimate for Nitrogen – 78%
– Estimate for Phosphorus – 85%
– Policy permits a greater share of manure nutrients
now than if applied 25 years ago.
34. 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000
1982
2007
19822
20072
Million Pounds
Phosphorus
Not AFO & not recoverable AFO & not recoverable
Recoverable Recoverable & Permitted
Nitrogen
Trends in Manure Nutrients
2007
1982
35. 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000
1982
2007
19822
20072
Million Pounds
Phosphorus
Not AFO & not recoverable AFO & not recoverable
Recoverable Recoverable & Permitted
Nitrogen
Trends in Manure Nutrients
Improvements from technology Improvements from management
2007
1982
36. Thank you!
Noel Gollehon
Noel.Gollehon@wdc.usda.gov
301-504-1763
USDA – NRCS
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination against its
customers, employees, and applicants for employment on the bases of race, color,
national origin, age, disability, sex, gender identity, religion, reprisal, and where
applicable, political beliefs, marital status, familial or parental status, sexual orientation,
or all or part of an individual's income is derived from any public assistance program, or
protected genetic information in employment or in any program or activity conducted or
funded by the Department. (Not all prohibited bases will apply to all programs and/or
employment activities.)
37. Background interest by EPA
• EPA
– As a part of the National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES), EPA regulates a subset
of Animal Feeding Operations (AFOs) termed CAFOs
(Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations).
– Technical manual (673 pages and 23MB)
– Producers guide (69 pages and 1MB)
– Guidance for CAFOs (231 pages and 6MB)
– EPA Science Advisory Board states in a 2011 report:
• domestic animals produce 6.0 Tg (6 million tonnes) N/yr in
manure and are the largest source of atmospheric ammonia
nitrogen (1.6 Tg N/yr).
– http://cfpub.epa.gov/npdes/home.cfm?program_id=7
38. Manure Nitrogen on AFOs
Distribution of manure nitrogen as excreted for confined livestock
on AFOs, by livestock type
39. Amount of manure phosphorus as excreted on non-AFOs and AFOs
Manure Phosphorus
40. Manure Phosphorus on AFOs
Amount of manure phosphorus as excreted for confined livestock
on AFOs, by AFO farm type
41. Manure Phosphorus on AFOs
Distribution of manure phosphorus as excreted for confined
livestock on AFOs, by AFO farm type
42. Manure Phosphorus on AFOs
Distribution of manure phosphorus as excreted for confined
livestock on AFOs, by livestock type