By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A product needing a niche of its own may have
secured a foothold in the hog industry as research is
showing kenaf offers a way to reduce swine odors. Dr. Tim
Burcham, associate agricultural engineer with the
Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, is
testing a bio-reactor he developed to filter and
biologically treat wastewater from hog production
facilities. The main
goal of the research is odor reduction and wastewater
treatment. Burcham's interest in the versatility of the
kenaf plant spurred the development of this
research. "I
wanted to find something that kenaf was better at than other
biological products," Burcham said. "There's potential for
this system to provide a cost-effective odor control using
only natural products." Kenaf is
a woody plant ideally suited to growth in Mississippi. Six
to eight tons of usable kenaf can be grown per acre. The
whole plant can be chopped up and used for the filter
system. The biological "slimes" accumulate in the kenaf
filters which are removed when full and treated in a
composting facility. This compost can be used on crops or
sold as a valuable fertilizer or soil amendment. "The
treated wastewater and kenaf compost can be used to provide
moisture and nutrients for growing kenaf and other forage
crops," Burcham said. "Swine producers can use the
wastewater and kenaf compost effectively to support the
agricultural process." In most
operations, hogs are kept on wire grates above a water tank.
Waste falls through and the water is flushed out to lagoons
every few days. Swine operations' odors come from wastewater
storage lagoons, swine housing facilities and fields on
which wastewater is spread. By
reducing the wastewater's odor, Burcham's system reduces the
odors associated with hog production. Researchers are still
collecting data, but preliminary results are
promising. The
method features a kenaf filter and bio-reactor, and a pump
circulating the hog wastewater through the system. It is
being tested on an experimental swine facility at
Mississippi State University's South Farm. Wastewater
in the test pit trickles through the filters seven times a
day during a seven-day test cycle, being treated and
stabilized as it passes through. Burcham said the test
system is similar to those used by municipal water systems,
except it uses kenaf in the filter. On the other side of the
barn, a control group of pigs is used for
comparisons. Early
data indicates that the filter system reduces nutrients in
the wastewater. While this reduces odors, it is also a
disadvantage because many swine producers use the wastewater
as fertilizer for forage production. "We have
found that if we're going to reduce the odor, we may have to
sacrifice some of the nutrient content," Burcham
said. Because
of the reduced nutrient wastewater produced in this system,
hog producers may need less acreage to spread the wastewater
in an environmentally sound manner. This provides a larger
buffer between the hog operation and its
neighbors. Dr.
Nancy Cox, assistant MAFES director, said odor is the
Mississippi hog industry's largest problem. MSU's
food science and technology department trained an odor panel
to objectively assess the degree of odor and so evaluate the
performance of the kenaf filter system and other
technologies. Cox said the odor panel determined that the
kenaf filter dramatically reduced the odor from the
wastewater. "Odor is
totally subjective and you must train to really tell the
difference," Cox said. "It is very important to be able to
measure reliably and objectively the odor and whether there
is a change. There is no machine at this time that works as
well as the human nose to detect odors like
these." The
research is a cooperative effort between MAFES, the Forest
Products Lab, and MSU departments of food science and
technology, chemical engineering, agricultural and
biological engineering, plant and soil sciences and
agricultural economics. Released:
Nov. 8, 1999
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Research Uses
Kenaf To Lessen Swine Odor
Contact: Dr. Tim Burcham, (662) 325-3282
Visit: DAFVM
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