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Wormholes, Yet
Another Avenue For Pollution?
9/14/2005
M2 Presswire
There's no doubt
that earthworms benefit agriculture by their tunneling. But a recent study has
shown that their burrows might also be funneling liquid manure--and possibly
other contaminants--to underground drainage pipes. These, in turn, flush
contaminated water onward, bypassing normal filtering and cleansing by soil.
Agricultural
Research Service soil scientist Martin J. Shipitalo, at the ARS North
Appalachian Experimental Watershed Laboratory in Coshocton, Ohio, and Frank
Gibbs, with USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service in Findlay, Ohio, did
the study in no-till fields with liquid manure applied.
They found that
water moved through wormholes twice as fast when the holes were within two feet
of drainage pipes. The pipes provided outlets that helped the water flow along,
instead of slowly percolating through small openings between soil particles.
The study suggests
that the most practical solution is for farmers to install shutoff valves so
they can turn off drainage during liquid manure application and for a short
time afterwards. Some Ohio farmers already do this, with cost-sharing from the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources. Another solution would be to install
catch basins at the edges of fields to capture water draining from pipes and
hold it for reuse. Both would help downstream water quality.
Worms, especially
night-crawlers, are especially attracted to no-till fields in areas that
require drainage. They like the combination of no-till, drainage pipes, and the
liquid manure farmers often apply to fields.
The worms eat the
leftover parts of crops left on the surface by no-till, which skips plowing
before planting, and they see the manure as food, too. The drainage pipes
aerate the soil nicely, loosening it up for easy digging, especially the soil
used to cover the drainage pipes. Plus, the crop residue offers them shelter,
and with no-till there's no fear of a plow breaking up their tunnels.
Read more about this
research in the September 2005 issue of Agricultural Research magazine:
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/sep05/worms0905.htm
ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research
agency.
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