Title: Dead Animal and Medical Waste Management
1Dead Animal and Medical Waste Management
- Dale W. Rozeboom
- Department of Animal Science
- Michigan State University
- Lyndon Kelley
- Regional Groundwater Agent
- MSU Extension
2Poultry Mortality in U.S.
North Carolina State University 1998
3Sheep Mortality in U.S.
A 100 ewe flock will dispose of 8 lambs and 2
ewes annually.
USDA APHIS 1994
4Horse Mortality in U.S.
- 3.5 to 4.0 of foals
- 1.5 young and adult horses
USDA APHIS 1996
5Dairy Mortality in U.S.
- 10.8 of heifer calves from birth to weaning
- 2.4 of heifers from weaning to first calf
- 3.8 of cows
A 300 cow dairy should expect to dispose of 33
calves, 7 heifers and 14 cows annually.
USDA APHIS 1996
6Beef mortality in U.S.
- 1.4 in feedlots (USDA APHIS 1999)
- Cow-calf
- Calves
- About 2 born dead
- About 1 pre-weaning
- Cows - 2.4 of breeding herd
7Swine Mortality in U.S.
- 10 - 15 of breeding herd
- 0.5 to 1.0 stillbirths
- 10 - 15 pre-weaning
- 2 nursery
- 2 growing/finishing
A typical 1,000 head swine finishing barn will
dispose of 52 hogs annually.
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9Bodies of Dead AnimalsAct 239 of 1982
- An act to license and regulate animal food
manufacturing, plants, transfer stations, dead
animal dealers, rendering plants and certain
vehicles to regulate the disposal of dead
animals and to provide for poultry and livestock
composting to prescribe powers and duties of
certain state departments to impose fees to
provide for remedies and to prescribe penalties
and to repeal acts and parts of acts.
10Objective
- Protect human and animal health
- Reduce risk of disease transmission
- Control flies, vermin and scavenging animal
problems - Protect environment
- Ground and surface water
- Air quality
11Definition of livestock
- In addition to those just mentioned, the
following are livestock too . . . - New World Camelids
- Bison
- Captive Cervidae
- Ratities
- Aquaculture
- Rabbits
12What is necessary for the livestock producer?
- Compliance with Bodies of Dead Animals Act
- RTF Protection
- MAEAP
- CNMP
- Good management
- Sanitation
- Consistency
- Records
- Federal compliance
- Reasonable cost
13All dead animals . . .
- Normal or natural mortality
- Report increases in mortality to MDA Director
- Must be disposed of within 24 hours after death
regardless of method - Exceptions
- Secured temporary cold storage ? 40º F for
maximum 7 days or ? 0º F for maximum 30 days - Road kill
- Restaurant grease
- Specimens from educational institutions
- Mortality from Animal Control
14Must be disposed of within 24 hours after death
regardless of method
15Present alternatives and concerns with each . . .
- Burial - high water table, frozen ground
- Incineration - cost of fuel, odor nuisance, not
after-birth - Rendering - less accessibility, disease risk
- Land-fill long-term sustainability, disease
risk - Composting management, facility
16Burial
- All body parts at least 2 feet beneath the
natural surface - No contact with bodies of water
- 200 feet from wells
17Individual Grave
- Closed within 24 hours (2 feet beneath the
natural surface) - 100 graves/acre, maximum 5 tons/acre
- Separated by a minimum of 2.5 feet
21 x 21
5 tons/acre 100, 100lb animals or 10, 1,000
lb animals
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18Common Grave
- Maximum 2.5 tons/acre
- Separated by minimum of 100 feet
- Covered with minimum of 1 foot of soil within 24
hours - Entire common grave cannot remain open for longer
than 30 days - Must have at least 2 feet of soil as final cover
4 grave sites per acre
105x 105
19Incineration
- Act 451, Part 55 sources of air pollution must
be permitted by Air Quality Division of MI DEQ - May be locally monitored as well
- Residue from incinerators
- Buried
- Land-applied at agronomic rates
- Licensed landfill
20Rendering
- Less service
- Animal owners reluctant to use animal
by-product feedstuffs - No longer collect animal tissues in some Michigan
locations - Large fees and economically unfavorable
21Land-fill
- Currently 23 landfills licensed to take dead
animals in Michigan - Technically, livestock producer is a business
- Must make arrangements to deliver
- Generally, there is no on-site pick-up
- Private or household animal tissue waste may
be put into curb-side dumpsters (i.e. remains of
one deer) - Disease risk with driving into site
- Must avoid complaints
22Mortality Composting
- The biological decomposition of organic material
under controlled conditions to a state where
storage, handling and land application can be
achieved without adversely affecting the
environment. - The effective destruction of body tissue using
biological organisms - Not recognizable aesthetically acceptable
- Incomplete decomposition
23Livestock carcasses
- Intrinsic to a operation under common ownership
or management - Consider specifications of law for transport
- May be left whole
- But splitting speeds composting process
- Poultry must be ground for that reason
- No mixing with poultry
- Disease testing is required for poultry annually
- hemorrhagic enteritis virus and salmonella
24Bulking Agent
- Sawdust
- Chopped Straw
- Spelt Hulls
- Bean Pods
- Grass Clippings
- Leaves
- Shredded Cardboard or Newspaper
- Chopped Cornstalks
- Finished Compost from secondary pile
25 Mortality Composting procedures
- Primary pile
- Fill time depends on daily mortality rate
- Leave 2 to 8 months
- Depending on carcass size, season if new pile
- Turn into secondary pile, leave 2 months
- Final compost
- Piled until applied to land
- Reused as bulking agent (5050 with fresh)
26Design of compost piles
27Major microbe activity factors
- Carbon nitrogen ratio
- Moisture content
- Particle size or porosity
- Percent recycled compost
- Stirring frequency
28Carbon to nitrogen ratio
- Carcass 5
- Recycled secondary 30-50
- Sawdust 140
- Too low C/N
- NH3
- Other odors
- Too high C/N
- Low decomposition rate
- Low temperature
Target is 201 to 351 or about 10 lb
carcass/ft3
29Moisture
- Carcass 65
- Recycled Secondary 40-50
- Sawdust 20-50
- Too low moisture
- Low decomposition rate
- Low temperatures
- Too high moisture
- Putrid odors
- Flys
Target is 40 to 60
30Temperature
- Best indicator of microbial activity
- Achieve high rate of decompostion 110oF - 150oF
- Destruction of insects and weed seed 3 days gt
131oF
31Mortality Composting structure
- 200 feet from surface water
- Distance from well - same as septic system (Act
399 of 1976, and act 368 of 1978) - Sized for production flow or expected daily
mortality rate
32Example Mortality Composting Layout
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35BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- Doesnt the compost pile stink?
-
- If the tissue is properly covered with 6 of
fresh bulking agent (Bio Filter) and placed 6 or
further from sides of pile, odors are suppressed.
- Smell is musty, earthy, wet leaves
- Color is dark brown
- Texture similar to bulking agent
36BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- If bone fragments are still present, can I land
apply compost? -
Following adequate primary and secondary
composting recognizable bones may still be
present. If they break under little pressure,
they can be spread. If not, further composting
is needed.
37BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- Is there a risk of spreading animal disease?
-
- Viability depends on
- Temperature as heat inactivates most bacteria and
viruses - Physical environment
- Most need a living animal as a host
- Too little moisture
- Organic acids (pH)
- Competition with other microbes
38BDA Composting Questions and Answers
What are the costs?
- Estimated cost 30 to 35 per square foot
- Existing facilities
- Salvage materials
39BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- Can I sell finished compost materials?
-
Yes in Michigan. Check with other state and/or
local authorities because standards and
regulations vary across the different states.
40BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- What else must an owner or operator do?
-
- Keep Records for minimum of first 2 years
- Start date of each new pile
- Quantity of tissue
- Temperature 2xs per week
- Turning dates
- Final disposition (method, location,
- date, estimated volume/wt, sale)
41Example record
42BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- What else must an owner or operator do?
-
Nutrient analysis one pile per year
43BDA Composting Questions and Answers
- What are other suggested bio-security measures?
- Rodent, wildlife and insect control
- Cleaning after animals are removed
- Disinfect equipment vehicles
- Restrict visitors
44Future of BDA Composting
45Veterinary Wastes
- Michigans Medical Waste regulatory Act, Part 138
of 1978 PA 368 (1990) - If vet visit then vet must dispose
- If farm (also household, home for aged, or home
health care agency) then in garbage - Sharps - hard plastic bottle with screw-on top
- Needles, syringes, scalpels, lancets
- Label Medical Waste or Sharps Container and
Not For Recycling - Bandages plastic bags
- Label (as above)
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