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Understanding Manure Management Behavior on Wisconsin Dairy Farms

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Included Studies of Feeding/Diet, Manure Handling/Storage, Field Application ... Unrealistic Nutrient Mgt Plans might be hard to follow (if enforced) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding Manure Management Behavior on Wisconsin Dairy Farms


1
Understanding Manure Management Behavior on
Wisconsin Dairy Farms
  • Lessons from Recent On-Farm Research
  • Douglas Jackson-Smith (Utah State University)
  • J. Mark Powell, Dan McCrory, Heather Saam (Univ
    of WI-Madison)

2
Overview
  • Present initial results of recent on-farm
    research
  • Focus the logic of manure mgt
  • Why do farmers spread manure (or not) on
    particular kinds of fields?
  • What obstacles prevent farmers from incorporating
    manure?
  • How do farmers view manure as a potential source
    of crop nutrients?
  • Emphasis on small- and medium-sized integrated
    crop-dairy farms in Wisconsin

3
Starting Points
  • Small- and Mid-sized livestock operations are
    important contributors to nutrient-water quality
    problems and are not going away
  • These operations do not always respond well to
    traditional approaches
  • Many technical or mgt solutions are inappropriate
    to their situation
  • To broaden research and policy agenda, we need to
    better understand these operations
  • Important to find representative farms

4
Constraints to Proper Manure Management (Nowak et
al 1998)
  • Institutional factors (research, extension)
  • Engineering factors (box spreaders)
  • Private Sector factors (motivation of input
    suppliers, risk avoidance)
  • Economic factors (economies of scale, risk, labor
    constraints)
  • Social-psychological factors (invisibility of
    impacts, safety weather concerns, low status of
    manure handling, vocabulary)
  • Environmental factors (land constraints,
    confinement systems, topography)

5
Background to OFG study
  • Integrated Research Into Nutrient Cycling on
    Wisconsin Dairy Farms
  • Included Studies of Feeding/Diet, Manure
    Handling/Storage, Field Application
  • On-farm component ? Attempt to model nutrient
    cycling on TYPICAL FARMS
  • Fall 2002 in-depth interviews used here
  • Modeling farms ongoing
  • Follow-up interviews planned
  • USDA NRI (Ag Systems) IFAFS funding

6
Study of 54 Dairy Farms On Farmers Ground
  • Within each region
  • 18 farms selected
  • 6 farms in each randomly selected from each
    animal density category

NE region
SC region
SW region
7
Profile of Respondents
  • Typical of Wisconsin dairy farms
  • Mean herd size 88 (median 66)
  • Most 50-99 cows (10 had 200 cows)
  • 80 stanchion barns (20 parlor/freestall)
  • 65 lbs milk shipped / cow / day
  • Mean cropland 275 acres (median 198)
  • Median 3.4 acres cropland / cow
  • Avg age 48
  • 77 rely mainly on farm income for hh

8
Manure Management Behavior
  • Roughly half have some manure storage
  • Mostly concrete lagoons
  • Average 280 days storage
  • Most haul manure to fields daily
  • Few incorporate manure after spreading
  • Few have written nutrient mgt plans
  • Storage affects manure mgt behavior
  • Though not as much as we might expect

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12
Understanding Manure Spreading Behavior
  • Previous work found manure gap
  • Farmers only utilizing 23-44 of cropland
  • Why?
  • Hypotheses
  • Absence of storage
  • Labor or machinery shortage
  • Weather or soil conditions
  • Distance of fields
  • Land tenure

13
Results
  • Structured Question
  • How important are the following factors in your
    decision to spread on a particular field?
  • Open-ended Question
  • What kinds of fields do you seek to spread
    manure?
  • Asked separately by season (fall, winter, spring,
    summer)

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17
Incorporating Manure
  • 50 overall do not incorporate at all
  • 25 of farms incorporate lt 1/4th
  • 10 incorporate 25-50 of manure
  • Why? (hypotheses)
  • Management system (daily haul, no-till)
  • Labor equipment constraints
  • Seasonality weather
  • Lack of concern/motivation

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20
Perceptions about Manure as Fertilizer Source
  • Open-ended questions
  • What is the biggest advantage of manure in
    comparison to commercial fertilizers?
  • What is the biggest disadvantage of manure
    compared to commercial fertilizer?

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23
Lessons and Conclusions
  • Small and mid-sized farms face many constraints
    to use of recommended manure management systems
  • No storage
  • Inability to incorporate
  • Inability to get to many fields on timely basis
  • These factors are not just poor motivation or a
    lack of information

24
Implications
  • Blanket policies to NM regulation might
    disproportionately impact small- and mid-sized
    operations
  • Unrealistic Nutrient Mgt Plans might be hard to
    follow (if enforced)
  • Alternatively, policies and technical solutions
    limited to the largest operations might fail to
    provide opportunities for improved outcomes

25
More Implications
  • Develop technical solutions and mgt systems that
    work within these constraints
  • Education/Info is not enough
  • May not be optimal (from NM perspective), but
    can improve performance

26
Suggestions for Future Research
  • Assume integrated crop/livestock systems
  • Assume many will not have long-term storage
  • More information about timing and placement of
    manure (vis-à-vis cropping patterns and landscape
    features)
  • Low-tech/cost options for manure handling and
    storage (in barn, farmstead, spreading)

27
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