By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Traditionally, poultry litter has been spread as a
fertilizer on pastures located in the 34 poultry-producing
counties in Mississippi. But a
combination of long-term land application of poultry litter
and decreases in pastureland has made this valuable
byproduct too much of a good thing. The nutrient storage
capacity of the soil in these south Mississippi counties has
been pushed close to its limits, raising concerns of
potential environmental problems from nutrient runoff into
water sources. Now,
researchers are involved in a collaboration between the
Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station and
the Southwest Mississippi Resource Conservation and
Development Council, Inc. They are investigating new uses
for poultry litter that will ensure continued
environmentally sound use of this material. The work could
also expand the market for poultry litter. One
application being explored is use of poultry litter as a
fertilizer in forests. Alex Friend, Mississippi State
University forestry scientist and a member of the
MAFES-RC&D project, has been studying the growth
response of pine trees to poultry litter and the
environmental quality issues associated with litter use in
forests. His initial results from a noncommercial-scale
study suggest raw poultry litter provides a good growth
response in pine trees, but it has a minimal impact on water
quality. "Mississippi
is heavily forested with pine trees growing in
nutrient-deficient soils," Friend said. "We saw poultry
litter use in forests as an opportunity to solve poultry
litter disposal questions and solve nutrient deficiency in
trees at the same time." At the
Coastal Plain Branch Experiment Station in Newton, Friend
led a team that tested the effectiveness of stockpiled cake
-- the top layer of raw poultry litter that has been cleaned
out of a chicken house and stored -- as a one-time
fertilizer in a thinned stand of 10-year-old
pines. In
March 2000, they applied raw poultry litter at three
application rates -- 0, 2.5 and 10 tons of litter per acre
-- to the stand and then assessed growth by measuring tree
diameter monthly. "We
were very surprised to see a growth response in trees within
the space of six months," Friend said. "This is very unusual
in forests because trees have so much mass and are buffered
to changes. We think this shows litter has much potential
for forestry use." But
another consideration that Friend had to make in his studies
before reaching any conclusions was whether forests can
"contain" the nutrients found in poultry litter. To answer
this question, Friend's team placed PVC tubes 20 inches into
the ground and collected soil water samples from just below
the main tree root mat. "Part
of the paradigm we were testing was that existing trees in
the stand would act as nutrient pumps to suck nutrients out
of soil and prevent nutrient movement into water and the
environment," Friend said. "We took lysimeter, or soil
water, samples to give us an idea of what leaches through
most of the tree roots and used it as an indication of what
might make it to surface water." As part
of this study, his team collected soil water samples every
month for more than a year. "Within
a month, we saw evidence of elevated nutrient availability
in soil," Friend said. "But the significant thing with this
part of the study was that application rates of 0 and 2.5
tons of litter per acre were usually indistinguishable in
terms of nutrient leakiness into soil water. So this
suggests a good growth response in forests can be obtained
without adding so much poultry litter that nutrients run
off." Friend
said he hopes to conduct a larger scale study that will look
into more detail at the actual impact of poultry litter
application in forests on a watershed. While
Friend has seen encouraging results with litter, he cautions
that not everyone in the state may want to use poultry
litter on forestland. "Trees,
and especially pine trees, are evolved to grow under
low-nutrient conditions," Friend explained. "Results with
poultry litter can be both good and bad, depending on soil
conditions." Friend
also noted that his studies were based on using a single
application of poultry litter in the lifetime of a tree
stand. He said more work would be required to address the
sustainability of this practice on a single piece of land.
Still, Friend said he thought a significant acreage of
Mississippi land could benefit. "Poultry
litter could be quite effective as fertilizer for landowners
who have a mixed holding of poultry and forestland, or who
live in proximity to poultry operations and are looking to
improve tree growth in nutrient-deficient forests," he
said. Research
data for this project are still being collected. Friend said
he expects final results and recommendations for use to be
available to landowners early next year. Released:
Sept. 24, 2001
Agricultural
News
![]()
Poultry litter
examined as
fertilizer for forests
For more information, contact:
Dr.
Alex Friend, (662) 325-2779
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:39
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010924cc.html
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