Abstract

Industrialized small-scale pig farming has been rapidly developed in developing regions such as China and Southeast Asia, but the environmental problems accompanying pig farming have not been fully recognized. This study investigated 168 small-scale pig farms and 29 example pig farms in Yujiang County of China to examine current and potential impacts of pig wastes on soil, water and crop qualities in the hilly red soil region, China. The results indicated that the small-scale pig farms produced considerable annual yields of wastes, with medians of 216, 333 and 773 ton yr−1 per pig farm for manure, urine and washing wastewater, respectively, which has had significant impact on surface water quality. Taking NH4+-N, total nitrogen (TN) or total phosphorus (TP) as a criterion to judge water quality, the proportions of Class III and below Class III waters in the local surface waters were 66.2%, 78.7% and 72.5%. The well water (shallow groundwater) quality near these pig farms met the water quality standards by a wide margin. The annual output of pollutants from pig farms was the most important factor correlated with the nutrients and heavy metals in soils, and the relationship can be described by a linear equation. The impact on croplands was marked by the excessive accumulation of available phosphorus and heavy metals such as Cu and Zn. For crop safety, the over-limit ratio of Zn in vegetable samples reached 60%, other heavy metals in vegetable and rice samples tested met the food safety standard at present.

Highlights

  • In the past two decades there has been a rapid development of swine husbandry in China, with a sold hog amount of 716 million heads accounting for about 50% of the total swine production in the world [1]

  • Small-scale pig farming contributed to 13.7% of the total annual sold hog in the county

  • The findings from this study indicated that solid and liquid wastes generated from small-scale pig farming werefrom considerable, and couldthat pose a great risk to the environment when they were

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Summary

Introduction

In the past two decades there has been a rapid development of swine husbandry in China, with a sold hog amount of 716 million heads accounting for about 50% of the total swine production in the world [1]. Small-scale pig farming (defined hereafter as being less than 1000 heads in annual sold hog amount through industrialized feeding operations, not including traditional backyard pig feeding in rural areas) still dominates in the swine industry of China [3]. Taking Vietnam as an example, 80% of its pig population is kept in smallholders’ feedlots [5].

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