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  • Livestock Ammonia Research

    and Plans for EWS Project

    Assessment

    Jay Ham

    Professor

    Department of Soil and Crop Science

    Colorado State University

    RMNP Ag Subcommittee, February 14, 2017

  • Outline • Review of Previous Research and Status

    • New Research • USDA / NIFA Grant on Feedlot NH3

    • Cooperative work with JBS–Five Rivers on feedlot water applications to reduce NH3 emissions.

    • Plans for the Assessment of the Early Warning System Pilot • Analysis and methods for creating the final

    report to NRCS and the subcommittee

  • Highlights from Prior Research

    • Ammonia Emissions

    • BMPs

    • Transport and Deposition

    • Measurement Technology

    • Feed Management

    Grants from USDA (2), EPA, NSF

  • Beef Feedlot NH3 Emissions Measurement

    45-55% of fed nitrogen is lost to the Atmosphere as Ammonia

    0

    20

    40

    60

    80

    100

    120

    140

    6/17-7/3 7/3-7/17 7/17 -7/28 7/28-8/7 8/7-8/13 8/13-8/21 8/21-8/29

    g/h

    ead

    /day

    Daily NH3 Emissions per Head

  • FeedFeed Production

    Atmospheric NH3 50

    Removed 20

    >95% of total

    volatilized NH3

    Diet 100

    Excreted N 85%

    Pens Retention pond

    5

    Runoff

    Stockpile, compost, land application

    Nitrogen flows in the feedyard (Slide from Rick Todd, USDA)

    < 5%

    Bierman et al. (1999), Cole et al. (2006), Farran et al. (2006), Flesch et al. (2007), Todd et al. (2008)

    15 10

    Haber-Bosch Process

    N2

    Natural gas

    NH4+ fertilizer

  • FeedFeed Production

    Atmospheric NH3 45-55

    Removed 15-25

    >95% of total

    volatilized NH3

    Diet 100

    Excreted N 75-85%

    Pens Retention pond

    3

    Runoff

    Stockpile, compost, land application

    Nitrogen flows in a Colorado feedyard

    < 5%

    Jay Ham, Christina Nash, and Kira Shonkwiler

    15-25 2

    Haber-Bosch Process

    N2

    Natural gas

    NH4+ fertilizer

  • Key Findings

    • 45-55% of the fed nitrogen is lost the atmosphere as ammonia

    • Ammonia volatilization occurs rapidly from fresh urine patches and feces, most is lost in the first few hours after excretion

    • Like the work of Todd et al., almost all the emissions occur from the pen surface – not compost piles , ponds, during pen cleaning, etc.

    • Ammonia loss in winter remains significant despite lower temperatures

    • Reducing crude protein in the diet can reduce pen surface emissions up to 40% - but could decrease rate of gain/profitability.

    • New NH3 measurement technologies and inverse modeling provide a viable method to measure NH3 losses from feedlots.

  • Reducing ammonia losses from beef feedlots after excretion of urea to the pen surface is almost impossible.

  • New Research on Livestock Ammonia

    Study of Ammonia and Methane Emissions from Animal Feeding Operations using Unmanned Aerial System Laser Sensors

    • PI: Azer Yalin, Co-PIs, Jeff Pierce, Jay Ham

    • USDA-US Department of Agriculture, 2016-2018, $494,062

    Effect of Water Application on Ammonia Emissions from Beef Cattle Feedlots

    • Jay Ham, Colorado State University

    • Justin Miller, JBS Five Rivers Cattle Feeding

  • UAS Deployment for Ag Monitoring

    • Research aims:

    1) Quantify ammonia and methane (GHG) emissions from CAFOs.

    2) Quantify fraction of ammonia emissions deposited to the ground in the near-field region (first few miles downwind).

    • Ground based measurements do not sample full (vertical) extent of atmospheric boundary layer leading to uncertainty in flux determination. UAS measurements can address this gap.

    Atmospheric

    Boundary

    Layer

  • UAS Sensor Integration

    • UAS Platform: – 12’ Senior Telemaster (ARF – Almost Ready to Fly), electric motor, autopilot

    – Currently designing platform for 20 pound payload and ~20 minute endurance

    • Methane Sensor: – Open-path CRDS (Gen. 2), 1.6 mm, 3 pound sensor head, 3 pound controller

    • Ammonia Sensor: – Open-path WMS, 10.3 mm, 3 pound sensor head, 3 pound controller

    • Mounting: Sensors hang externally below wing, controllers inside fuselage

    Controllers

    inside fuselage Sensors

  • Water Application to Beef Feedlots

  • Assessment of the Early Warning System Pilot Program

  • Criteria / Questions

    • Science / Implementation: Did the project achieve its stated goals?

    • Participation/Awareness/Outreach: Did the livestock industry, MOU agencies, and other stakeholders benefit ? • Social Cost-Benefit Analysis

    • Effectiveness: Can the EWS have a measurable impact on inorganic nitrogen deposition in RMNP ? Does it work ? • Cost-Effectiveness Analysis, $$/(gram of N per Ha per year)

  • Wet Inorganic N Deposition at Loch Vale Reduced vs. Oxidized

    NO3 NH4

  • Key Information for Assessment

    • Source Apportionment. What fraction of the deposition originates from livestock operations and other ag operations.

    • Performance of the EWS. Accuracy of predictions/warnings, participation (# operations or animals that are in program),fraction of participants that respond to a warning.

    • Effectiveness of the BMPs: How much do the BMPs or practices used or curtailed during a warning effect ammonia emmissions.

  • Source Apportionment

    On average, the results show that Colorado is the single largest

    contributor(approximately 40%) of reduced nitrogen concentration and

    deposition at the core site.

    Wet Inorganic N Deposition at Loch Vale East vs. West

    NO3 NH4-west NH4-east-not EWS

  • EWS Performance / Participation Aaron Pina, Brock Faulkner, Russ Schumacher, et al.

    Wet Inorganic N Deposition at Loch Vale EWS Participation

    NO3 NH4-west NH4-east-not EWS NH4-east-in EWS

  • Effectiveness of BMPs / Practices

    • Most practices and BMP are not very effective at the full scale of the feedlot or dairy

    • The upper limit is likely about 25% reduction using something like pen sprinkling.

    • Most practices like not cleaning pens or not turning compost will likely cause reductions of 1 to 5%.

  • Preliminary Analysis

    • Preliminary analysis using best available information and using optimistic numbers suggests a fully operational EWS would reduce NH4 wet deposition in RMNP on the order of 1%.

    Parameter Percent Reduced N deposition in RMNP from East of Cont. Divide 50

    Fraction of East-Origin Deposition Targeted by EWS 50

    Fraction of Deposition Events Forecast Correctly 80

    Fraction of Producers that comply 60

    Effectiveness of BMPs 10

    Percent reduced N Deposition Reduction in RMNP 1.2%