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Silage and the Environment

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Title: Silage and the Environment


1
Silage and the Environment
  • Fred Springborn
  • Agriculture Agent
  • Michigan State University Extension
  • Montcalm County

2
What 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

3
Why 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

4
Why 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

5
Why 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

6
What to do
  • First lets understand what silage is

7
What is silage?
  • Livestock feed

8
What is silage?
  • Livestock feed
  • High Moisture Livestock Feed

9
What is silage?
  • Livestock feed
  • High Moisture Livestock Feed
  • Pickled Forage

10
How silage is made
  • Forage is piled or put into a container
  • Microbes go to work

11
How 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

12
How 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

13
Silage 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!

14
Silage 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

15
Silage 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

16
Silage 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)

17
Silo design and construction
  • Upright silos can be classified as
  • Oxygen limiting glass lined
  • Oxygen limiting concrete

18
Silo design and construction
  • Upright silos can be classified as
  • Poured concrete
  • Stave non-airtight silo

19
Silo 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)

20
Silo design and construction
  • Horizontal trench silos
  • Above ground with concrete floor, no sidewalls

21
Silo 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

22
Silo 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

23
Silo design and construction
  • To minimize risk of groundwater contamination
    from horizontal and vertical silos
  • Divert rain water away from silos

24
Silo 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

25
Silo design and construction
  • Silo bags
  • Repair holes in bags quickly to keep spoilage to
    a minimum
  • Dispose of used plastic bags properly

26
Silo 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

27
Thank You ! Any Questions ?
Fred Springborn Agriculture Agent Michigan State
University Extension Montcalm County
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