Abstract

AbstractIntensive dairy farming is implicated with the phosphorus (P) enrichment and eutrophication of fresh water bodies. In Northern Ireland (NI), although P surpluses on dairy farms are high, representative soil P data for both dairy and non‐dairy ruminant sector grassland are needed to help assess the extent to which dairying per se is contributing to poor water quality. Data from a recently completed European Union funded NI‐wide soil testing scheme were available to help in this assessment. A high proportion (50%) of dairy grassland was found to be over‐supplied with P (>25 mg Olsen‐P l soil−1), but surprisingly, some 25% of more extensively managed non‐dairy ruminant grassland was also over‐supplied with P. This is possibly because fertilizer‐P and/or manure‐P is being spread and/or faeces excreted by out‐wintered livestock on only a fraction of the grassland area, with most of the remaining land being too wet or too inaccessible for such management. Therefore, even though the P over‐supply situation is most acute in the dairy sector, because the non‐dairy ruminant sector occupies the majority (78%) of the ruminant grassland platform, it is responsible for almost two thirds (64%) of all P‐enriched grassland soils across the ruminant sectors, and hence potentially poses a greater threat to water quality than the more intensive dairy sector. To address this newly recognized problem, farm‐gate P surpluses may need to be redefined in terms of surplus P per unit of land suitable for manure‐P application and/or out‐wintering livestock, as opposed to land owned or managed, and a regulatory maximum limit applied to all ruminant farms regardless of their management intensity or stocking density.

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