108679 Dairy Manure Application Frequency and Crop Rotations Influence Off-Farm Fertilizer Needs and Soil Fertility Balance.
Poster Number 1328
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Nutrient Dynamics and Management in Dairy and Beef Cattle Production Systems Poster (includes student competition)
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Tampa Convention Center, East Exhibit Hall
Abstract:
Dairy farms often grow forages for their dairy herd and import grain, enabling them to increase animal units per hectare over time, often resulting in manure nutrient accumulation and a high soil test P. In Pennsylvania, all livestock farms are required to have manure management plans, but farms with 2 AUE/A (2.24 Mg of animal liveweight/ha) have excess manure and require certified manure management plans. We hypothesized that even with a lower animal stocking rate, if dairy manure is applied frequently and to crops with low P and K removal, over time off-farm fertilizer need would decline and soil fertility levels increase to above optimum. On cropland that did not have a manure application history, we applied dairy manure to three, no-till crop rotations that differed in crop nutrient removal and manure application frequency (3, 4 or 6 applications over eight years). Two diverse rotations produced forages (corn silage and alfalfa and orchardgrass) and together produced all the feed and forage for a 0.561 Mg of AUE/ha dairy farm, one rotation was a corn grain and soybean rotation. We measured soil fertility before we initiated the experiment, and in years 3 and 6. Soil tests and estimated crop nutrient needs informed a nutrient management plan that included starter fertilizer. Within a few years, the nutrient management plan and soil tests indicated that supplemental P fertilizer was not needed in all rotations, P levels were often in excess of crop needs, and supplemental K fertilizer needs declined. Less supplemental K was needed in the corn grain-soybean rotation than in the rotations with forages, but also in rotations with more frequent manure applications. As hypothesized, a dairy farm with a low stocking rate, can have fields accumulate high nutrient levels associated with frequent manure application even with significant crop nutrient removal.
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Nutrient Dynamics and Management in Dairy and Beef Cattle Production Systems Poster (includes student competition)