Injecting poultry litter into soil to prevent runoff 21 Nov 2006
A soil scientist from the US Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) will soon investigate an experimental method of injecting chicken
litter into the soil to keep this natural fertiliser from contaminating water
runoff.

Peter Kleinman will undertake his research in the Delmarva region, which
has around 2,700 poultry farms that each year raise 571,141,000 chickens and
produce 600,000 tons of litter.
The litter, a combination of manure and bedding straw, is an ideal
fertiliser for corn, soybeans and other Delmarva crops. However, spreading it
over the soil surface exposes nutrients like phosphorus to runoff that can drain
into the bay's surrounding waters, triggering algal blooms that block sunlight
and deprive fish, crabs and other forms of aquatic life of oxygen.
The increasingly popular use of no-till farming compounds the problem,
according to Kleinman, with the
ARS Pasture Systems and Watershed Management Research
Laboratory.
Since 2005, he has been researching fertiliser-application equipment called
injectors, which squirt liquefied manure below the soil surface. Tom Way, a
collaborator with the ARS Soil Dynamics Laboratory, developed the new
litter-injector technology.