4.7 Article

Particulate matter emissions during field application of poultry manure - The influence of moisture content and treatment

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 780, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146652

Keywords

Dry matter content; Fine dust; Bacteria; Organic fertilizer; Broiler litter; Livestock

Funding

  1. Leibniz Association, Berlin, Germany, within the Senate committee competition (SAW) 2017 [SAW-2017-DSMZ-2]
  2. Leibniz Research Alliance INFECTIONS '21

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The study found a positive correlation between manure dry matter content and PM release during poultry manure application, indicating treatments strongly increasing DM should be avoided. However, high moisture content led to reduced microbial abundance, lowering the risk of pathogen dispersion. Optimal control of manure DM content in the range of 50-70% can effectively reduce PM aerosolization.
Along with industry and transportation, agriculture is one of the main sources of primary particulate matter (PM) emissions worldwide. Bioaerosol formation and PM release during livestock manure field application and the associated threats to environmental and human health are rarely investigated. In the temperate climate zone, field fertilization with manure seasonally contributes to local PM air pollution regularly twice per year (spring and autumn). Measurements in a wind tunnel, in the field and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations were performed to analyze PM aerosolization during poultry manure application and the influence of manure moisture content and treatment. A positive correlation between manure dry matter content (DM) and PM release was observed. Therefore, treatments strongly increasing the DM of poultry manure should be avoided. However, high manure DM led to reduced microbial abundance and, therefore, to a lower risk of environmental pathogen dispersion. Considering the findings of PM and microbial measurements, the optimal poultry manure DM range for field fertilization was identified as 50-70%. Maximum PM10 concentrations of approx. 10 mg per m(3) of air were measured during the spreading of dried manure (DM 80%), a concentration that is classified as strongly harmful. The modeling of PM aerosolization processes indicated a low health risk beyond a distance of 400 m from the manure application source. The detailed knowledge about PM aerosolization during manure field application was improved with this study, enabling manure management optimization for lower PM aerosolization and pathogenic release into the environment. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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