Abstract

Odorous gas emissions from swine production have been a concern for neighbors and communities near livestock farms. Manure storage is one of the main sources of gaseous emissions. Manure additive products are marketed as a simple solution to this environmental challenge. Manure additives are user-friendly for producers and can be applied (e.g., periodically poured into manure) without changing the current manure storage structure. Little scientific data exist on how these products perform in mitigating gaseous emissions from swine manure. The research objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of 12 marketed manure additives on mitigating odor, ammonia (NH3), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), greenhouse gases (GHG), and odorous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from stored swine manure. A controlled pilot-scale setup was used to conduct 8-week long trials using manufacturer-prescribed dosages of additives into swine manures. Manure was outsourced from three swine farms to represent a variety of manure storage types and other factors affecting the properties. Measured gaseous emissions were compared between the treated and untreated manure. None of the tested products showed a significant reduction in gaseous emissions when all (n = 3) manures were treated as replicates. Selected products showed a wide range of statistically-significant reduction and generation of gaseous emissions when emissions were compared in pairs of manure types from one farm. The latter observation highlighted the lack of consistent mitigation of gaseous emissions by manure additives. The results of this study do not warrant full-scale trials with the tested products.

Highlights

  • The swine industry has a significant environmental and socio-economic challenge with the gaseous emissions that originate from the storage, handling, and land-application of swine manure

  • The objective of this study was to test the effectiveness of 12 marketed manure additives on their mitigation of gaseous emissions of odor, ammonia (NH3), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), greenhouse gases (GHG), and odorous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from stored swine manure

  • Rows in each table are organized by targeted gases, starting with NH3 and followed by H2S, GHGs, odor, and odorous VOCs

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Summary

Introduction

The swine industry has a significant environmental and socio-economic challenge with the gaseous emissions that originate from the storage, handling, and land-application of swine manure. Emissions of ammonia (NH3), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), volatile organic compounds (VOCs) contribute to odor nuisance. Researchers have measured gaseous and odor emissions from animal buildings (Akdeniz et al, 2012a; Bereznicki et al, 2012; Cai et al, 2015). Efforts linking concentrations of gases and measured odor are challenging (Akdeniz et al, 2012b; Parker et al, 2012). Airborne particulate matter can sorb VOCs and be a carrier of odor (Cai et al, 2006)

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