New Poultry Litter Application Method Holds Promise In Corn
USDA and UK scientists successfully tested a new subsurface application method for poultry litter in Western Kentucky.
PHOTO: Jason Simmons, USDA-ARS
PRINCETON, KY.
Researchers with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural
Research Service in collaboration with a researcher from the University
of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Food and Environment successfully
tested a new application method for poultry litter in no-till corn on a
Western Kentucky farm.
Farmers often use poultry litter as an
alternative to chemical fertilizer in pasture and row crop production,
as it provides nutrients and organic matter for plants and soil.
“When used wisely, poultry litter is a valuable resource,” said Edwin
Ritchey, UK extension soil scientist. “It provides nutrients to the
soil, eases environmental concerns and, in many cases, is cost
effective.”
Current surface broadcast application methods, however, leave an unpleasant smell and pose environmental concerns.
The new method injects dry litter directly into the soil by using a
subsurface litter application implement developed by USDA-ARS
researchers. Karamat Sistani, a soil scientist and research leader with
the USDA-ARS in Bowling Green, has worked on developing this poultry
litter subsurface application technology for the past 10 to 12 years
with fellow USDA-ARS scientists.
“It is one new method of how to
apply poultry litter that has environmental and agronomical benefits,”
Sistani said. “Previous research projects have focused on using the
technology in pasture and cotton. This is the first study on a
large-scale plot of corn.”
A two-year study conducted by Sistani,
Jason Simmons, USDA-ARS biological science technician; Dan Pote,
USDA-ARS soil scientist in Booneville, Ark. and Ritchey found the
subsurface application of poultry litter had a huge advantage over the
traditional application methods in terms of improved air quality and
runoff nutrient reduction.
“It reduces the amount of ammonia being
released into the atmosphere by 90 to 95 percent, and nutrients stay in
the soil where plants can get them and are not lost through surface
runoff,” Sistani said.
Researchers tested the application against
the traditional dry poultry litter broadcast application and an
application of a commercial fertilizer.
Simmons found that the
grain yields and biomass yields when the plants were at full maturity
were similar in all three applications. When the corn reached the V5
growth stage, the subsurface application had a greater biomass yield and
nutrient uptake than the traditional broadcast method.
“This
technology could be used in sensitive areas such as land bordering
residential developments or watersheds,” Simmons said. “It also provides
a more uniform application of the litter and could result in reduced
rates of fertilizer.”
Researchers conducted the study in Daviess
County, where, poultry litter is readily found, which contributed to
site selection.
Ritchey said the new application method “is really a win-win situation for all involved.” ∆