100581 Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Soil Amended with Low-Phosphorus Broiler Litter.

Poster Number 324-618

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Animal Agriculture and the Environment (includes student competition)

Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Phoenix Convention Center North, Exhibit Hall CDE

Ariel A. Szogi, 2611 W Lucas St, USDA-ARS, Florence, SC, Kyoung S Ro, ARS, USDA, Florence, SC and Paul Shumaker, USDA-ARS, Coastal Plains Soil, Water and Plant Research Center, Florence, SC
Abstract:
Regions of the United States with a high concentration of poultry farms have soils with excess nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) far beyond the agronomic requirement of crops because of recurrent land application of broiler litter. A new waste treatment technology developed by USDA-ARS, called “Quick Wash”, can recover phosphates from broiler litter while better balancing the N:P ratio of the treated litter for crop needs. While some studies have shown the addition of broiler litter to soil may increase nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions, limited information is available on the effect of low-P broiler litter after the “Quick Wash” treatment. Our objective was to carry out a laboratory test to evaluate N2O emissions from a Norfolk loamy sand amended with low-P broiler litter in loose or pellet forms as compared to N2O emissions from broiler litter without the "Quick Wash" treatment. Undisturbed soil cores (15 cm x 5 cm diam.) received the following amendments:  un-amended soil (control), raw litter, pelletized raw litter, low-P litter, and pelletized low-P litter.  All cores were adjusted to 60 % water-filled porosity, enclosed in plastic jars, and incubated at 25°C for 68 d, with periodic N2O emission measurements. The highest maximum N2O flux peak was observed at incubation day 16 with the pelletized raw litter (348 ng N/cm2/h). Whereas much lower maximum flux peaks for the low-P litter (121 ng N/cm2/h) and the low-P pelletized litter (37 ng N/cm2/h) were both observed at incubation day 7. Accordingly, raw, raw pelletized, low-P, low-P pelletized litter, and un-amended soil had cumulative N2O productions of 1261, 894, 407, 287, and 80 µg N2O-N/kg soil, respectively. Further detailed discussion of the impact of these amendments on soil N2O emissions will be included in our presentation.

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Animal Agriculture and the Environment (includes student competition)