Title: Silage and the Environment
1Silage and the Environment
- Fred Springborn
- Agriculture Agent
- Michigan State University Extension
- Montcalm County
2What is the environmental concern with silage?
- When improperly harvested, stored and/or handled,
silage can produce a significant flow of leachate
and other waste products
3Why the concern?
- Silage leachate in surface water
- has a fish kill potential because of high organic
content - has the same pollution potential from 300 tons as
would the sewage generated by a city of 80,000
people
4Why the concern?
- Silage leachate in groundwater
- contaminates through odor, increased acidity,
ammonia, nitrate, bacteria and iron - can release naturally occurring metals in aquifer
and in soil because of low pH, which can increase
concentration in groundwater
5Why the concern?
- Nitrate is the concern
- infants less than 6 months old should not consume
water with 10 mg/L nitrate concentration - livestock should not consume water with levels
over 100 mg/L
6What to do
- First lets understand what silage is
7What is silage?
8What is silage?
- Livestock feed
- High Moisture Livestock Feed
9What is silage?
- Livestock feed
- High Moisture Livestock Feed
- Pickled Forage
10How silage is made
- Forage is piled or put into a container
- Microbes go to work
11How silage is made
- Microbial life begins the process of
decomposition (rot) - Silage is made when environmental conditions are
just right for just the right amount of rot
12How silage is made
- The right amount of rot is when microbes have
used up available oxygen and have produced enough
by-product acid to prevent other microbes from
producing more rotting
13Silage moisture content
- Silage can be made from all types of roughages as
well as grain crops - The amount of leachate produced depends on
- Type of forage
- Moisture content
- Nitrogen content
- Handling and storage conditions
- Moisture is the most crucial!
14Silage moisture content
- Managing the input moisture content for the
method of silage storage used will help farmers
produce quality feed while minimizing leachate - Example
- Forages stored at 65 percent moisture content or
higher can produce leachate - For grass silage, a trickle of leachate is
produced at 75 percent moisture to 79 gallons per
ton at 85 percent moisture
15Silage moisture content
- About 75 percent of the leachate is produced in
the first three weeks of storage, although it can
continue to flow for up to three months - Ensiling forages with moisture content above 70
percent is not recommended - Adding dry material as an absorbent reduces
leachate and improves feed quality
16Silage moisture content
- Dropping moisture content 10 percent can change
leachate production by 100 percent - Most Michigan silage is of low moisture content
(grasses and alfalfas are allowed to wilt prior
to ensiling)
17Silo design and construction
- Upright silos can be classified as
- Oxygen limiting glass lined
- Oxygen limiting concrete
18Silo design and construction
- Upright silos can be classified as
- Poured concrete
- Stave non-airtight silo
19Silo design and construction
- Horizontal trench silos
- Above ground
- Earthen excavated
- Earthen excavated with concrete floor with clay
sidewalls - Above ground with concrete floor and sidewalls
(bermed, concrete, or wooden)
20Silo design and construction
- Horizontal trench silos
- Above ground with concrete floor, no sidewalls
21Silo design and construction
- To minimize risk of groundwater contamination
from horizontal and vertical silos - All silos should have sloped concrete floors so
that leachate can be diverted to a storage pit or
a grass filter strip - Leachate should not be allowed to enter surface
water because of its high oxygen demand
22Silo design and construction
- To minimize risk of groundwater contamination
from horizontal and vertical silos - Silo caps or covers keep out rain, help maintain
silage quality and reduce leachate
23Silo design and construction
- To minimize risk of groundwater contamination
from horizontal and vertical silos - Divert rain water away from silos
24Silo design and construction
- Silo bags
- Used with both high and low moisture silage
- Leachate can pool in bags and leak out when
opened - Use same options for managing leachate as in
horizontal silos
25Silo design and construction
- Silo bags
- Repair holes in bags quickly to keep spoilage to
a minimum - Dispose of used plastic bags properly
26Silo location from well
- With concrete floors and drain control -- gt 50
feet - Without concrete floors -- gt 300 feet
- Silo --gt 50 feet from surface water
27Thank You ! Any Questions ?
Fred Springborn Agriculture Agent Michigan State
University Extension Montcalm County