By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A study of the practice of land application of
poultry litter suggests copper and zinc may accumulate in
amended soils using current nutrient management
strategies. Billy
Kingery, soil scientist with the Mississippi Agricultural
and Forestry Experiment Station, has completed a study to
determine the effect of long-term application of poultry
litter on the amount and distribution of these metals in
soil. Metals,
such as copper and zinc, and the metalloid arsenic, are
added to poultry feed in trace amounts as part of a diet
designed to optimize bird growth and performance. Because
these compounds are excreted in poultry waste, there have
been concerns that long-term land application of poultry
litter could lead to metal contamination of surface and
groundwater supplies through runoff and leaching, Kingery
said. "Copper
and zinc can accumulate in the food chain and are
potentially toxic to organisms at high levels," Kingery
said. "We began this work because the potential for copper
and zinc to accumulate at high levels in soils amended with
poultry litter over long periods warranted
study." To
determine the effect of litter application on the
accumulation and movement of metals in soil, Kingery and
researcher Feng Xiang Han compared soil samples from a
pasture where poultry litter was added for 25 years with
that from an adjacent, nonamended forest soil. They worked
with a poultry producer in Neshoba County who owns the land
surveyed in this study. The
Mississippi State University team collected soil from 130
sites in the pasture and forest. Soil samples were analyzed
for concentrations of copper and zinc, as well as nickel,
chromium, lead and manganese -- metals that also cause
environmental and health problems at high levels.
"We
found that metals do accumulate in waste-amended soil over
time," Kingery said. "But even with recent heavy
applications of litter on this farm, the total concentration
of these elements was still below limits set by the
Environmental Protection Agency." Kingery
said these results were encouraging, but total metal
concentrations only provide one piece of the puzzle.
"To
fully understand metal behavior in soil, you need to know
where they're found. Are they in the organic or inorganic
components? Are they available to plants? Or, are they bound
strongly to soil particles?" Kingery explained. Kingery's
team collected soil samples at different depths up to 180
centimeters to determine the location and levels of metals
in the profiles of litter-amended soils. They also passed
the soil samples through a series of chemical assays to
evaluate metal mobility into the environment and
availability to plants. "Our
results so far suggest that current recommended nutrient
management practices allow safe management of metals,"
Kingery said. "The metals are available to plants, and over
time, they are less able to move into the environment. No
extra management practices seem to be required." But
different soil characteristics and climate can have an
effect on metal accumulation. Consequently, Kingery has
begun a collaboration with Agricultural Research Service
scientist Karamat Sistani and the Natural Resources
Conservation Service to examine metal accumulation following
long-term litter application on farms located in other
counties. "Soil
components can affect metal availability to plants and
mobility in the environment. Some components, like
chelators, make metals more available to an organism; others
bind metals strongly and prevent metal absorption," Kingery
said. Kingery
also is working with National Sedimentation Laboratory
scientists to evaluate metal mobility in different agronomic
systems that use poultry litter. "We're
looking at the actual runoff from plots planted with
different row crops," he said. "Management can have a strong
influence on what happens to metals. These studies will give
us an idea of the economics and sustainability of litter
application using different management
practices." Kingery's
research is funded by the MAFES Special Research Initiative
program. In addition, this project has received backing from
the Mississippi Poultry Association and the Mississippi Farm
Bureau. Released:
March 18, 2002
Mississippi Agricultural
News
![]()
Study tests the
staying mettle of copper, zinc
Contact: Dr. Billy Kingery, (662) 325-2748
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:27:58
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