Training
Module 2. Science behind the Rules and NRCS's Code 590
The “rules”
that we are focusing on are Alabama’s 2000 CAFO/AFO Rules which set up the CAWV
program by stating that a CAWV must " . . . effectively manage, handle, transport,
store, and properly land apply AFO waste in a manner that meets or exceeds NRCS
technical standards and guidelines . . . ".
However, this one statement in ADEM's CAFO/AFO Rules“ effectively
make NRCS’s technical standards and guidelines “THE
LAW”.
These “technical standards and guidelines” are numerous and
complicated. The local Soil and Water
Conservation District office in your home county or your local
http://www.aces.edu/dept/aawm/
Most of the best management practices that
you'll need to know are in the NRCS technical standard known as “NRCS Nutrient
Management Code 590.” Each state has
adopted its own 590 Code that meets or exceeds NRCS’s
federal Code 590. In
You can review the entire code or only part of it at this web site:
http://www.aces.edu/department/aawm/al590.pdf
Code 590 requires that each field, site, or farm be
evaluated for risk of vulnerability of nitrogen and phosphorus to impact water
resources. This evaluation uses all
available information, such as soil ratings for leaching of soluble nutrients,
soil infiltration rates, geology reports, sinkhole maps, stream classification,
proximity of site to wells and streams, etc.
The Phosphorus Index for Alabama is used to assess the potential risk of phosphorus movement into water on all fields or portions of fields that will
have animal manure, poultry litter,
compost or other organic by-products applied on them.
NRCS
Agronomy Tech Note AL-72, Jan2001, which describes the Phosphorus Index (PI),
can be reviewed at
http://www.aces.edu/department/aawm/PINDEXFinal2001.pdf
A Phosphorus Index Worksheet is used for this phosphorus risk assessment.


The
following BMPs were taken from the Code590.
BMP: Consider Other Sources of Nutrients

Some of these BMPs are very
practical and are just common sense practices such as the one for managing
available nitrogen from legume cover crops.

BMP: Apply Nutrients Based
on Soil Test
Another BMP
recommends doing what we have always done, apply
nutrients based on a soil test report for the intended land use. This also assures that the crop needs are
considered.
Nutrient planning and
application should be based on current
soil test results and recommendations developed in accordance with

The presidedress soil nitrate test has been used to determine
if there is enough soil nitrogen present at sidedressing
time to make a corn crop without additional fertilizer nitrogen. What was found in
It makes
economical sense to apply the nitrogen (e.g., animal manures) within 30 days of
planting. So, what happened to all that
nitrogen if it is applied at the wrong time?
It ends up as nitrate in our groundwater or runs off into our streams,
lakes, rivers, and ultimately, the

This study
at the Prattville Experiment Field shows how quickly nitrogen in the upper 2
feet of soil can be lost during two growing seasons.


One of the main reasons for
this rapid loss of nitrate is our rainfall pattern. The above figure for the
One of the
most controversial aspects of the Code 590 is the line above which no animal
manures should be applied between November 15 and February 15. This is really no change in previous policy
and recommendations in that animal manures must be applied only to actively
growing crops. In 2002, the NRCS Code
590 for

As an
example, note that fescue in

This chart from the book, Southern Forages, indicate very little forage availability in
December through February for most cool-season forages.
When you
consider that the winter months produce the highest average rainfall
(precipitation) and the lowest average evapotranspiration
or plant use plus evaporation, then there is a tremendous risk for nutrient
loss during the winter months throughout
|
WHAT SHOULD I DO? Okay, so the research indicates that we should not, as a general rule, be spreading animal waste in the winter when not much is growing. What should I, as a CAWV, do when asked to spread for a customer in the winter? Ask the following questions. "Do you have a nutrient management or conservation plan which specifies winter application?" If so, follow that plan. "Do you have an actively growing crop that can use the nutrients applied?" About the only cool season crop that makes adequate growth during the fall and winter is cereal rye. On the average, it can use about 30 pounds of N per acre or about 1/2 ton of broiler litter or 1 ton of wet breeder litter per acre. This isn't much! "Were any nutrients fall applied?" If so, chances are that you shouldn't be adding more. |
Check out the link to the NRCS Code 590 in order to answer the questions for this module about best management practices.
Please return to the
Course Content page (click >Course Content...> on the WebCT
navigation bar at the top of this window) to take the Self-Help Test for this
Module.