|
Smoking Out Worms
9/1/2005
Agricultural Research
By Don Comis
Nightcrawlers may be at least partly responsible for the sometimes rapid
movement of liquid animal manure and chemicals such as fertilizer nutrients and
pesticides through soil to underground drainage pipes.
Farmers with large livestock feedlots need to recycle voluminous quantities
of manure by applying it to their fields as fertilizer. Often they store it in
special ponds as a liquid slurry. To reduce odor and nutrient losses, farmers
generally use special equipment to inject the liquid manure under the soil
surface, rather than just spray it on top of fields.
But in Ohio at least, USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)
and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources receive complaints each year about
animal wastes turning up in water pouring out of drainage pipes--often called
"tiles," from the days when they were made of ceramic--at the edges
of fields and in nearby streams, shortly after manure injection into the
fields.
Soil scientist Martin J. Shipitalo, at the ARS North Appalachian
Experimental Watershed Laboratory in Coshocton, Ohio, and Frank Gibbs, with NRCS in Findlay, Ohio,
studied pipe-drained no-till fields with liquid manure applications. "We
wanted to see what role wormholes might play in funneling manure to
below-ground pipes quickly, before it can be held by the soil and used by
plants," Shipitalo says.
No-till fields in poorly drained areas of the United
States, such as northwestern Ohio--and fertilized with liquid manure--are
especially conducive to worms. Nightcrawlers (Lumbricus terrestris) especially
like the combination of no-till, drainage pipes, and manure. No-till involves
no plowing before planting, so it leaves leftover parts of previous crops on
the surface. This provides food for the worms, as does the manure.
The crop residue also offers shelter for worms and helps increase their
populations. It also keeps wormholes intact, since there's no plowing to break
them up. And the drainage pipes aerate the soil nicely--especially the soil
used to cover the pipes. The plastic pipes have drainage holes, the same as the
pipe used by homeowners to funnel rainwater away from their homes.
Nightcrawlers Go Deeper
These types of fields tend to have higher than usual numbers of
nightcrawlers and other worms, which congregate close to pipes, Shipitalo says.
"Unfortunately for drainage problems, nightcrawlers dig deeper and wider
holes, or burrows, than many other earthworms do. These holes can become a
shortcut for conducting pesticides or manure or surplus fertilizers to
groundwater or streams. Normally, soil acts as a filter for potential pollutants
if they stay in the soil long enough for microbes to break them down or--in the
case of fertilizers--for plants to use them," Shipitalo says.
Down the Drain
Underground draining of fields is a common practice in parts of the country
where natural drainage is poor. It's increasing in popularity, with pipes now
being buried shallower and closer together.
Shipitalo and Gibbs traced wormhole connections to drainage pipes by blowing
smoke through the pipes and watching for it to pour out of nearby surface
wormhole entrances. "In a study of 38 nightcrawler burrows, we found that
the burrows tended to drain into the pipes when they were within 2 feet of a
the line," Shipitalo says.
"To test how fast manure-laden water could move through the burrows to
the tiles, we used a brilliant blue dye and a fluorescent dye. We poured the
blue water into the burrows that had emitted smoke and the fluorescent dye in
the other burrows," Shipitalo says.
On average, the researchers found that water moved through the burrows that
were within 2 feet of the pipes--and had emitted smoke--twice as fast as
through the other worm burrows. Having the pipes as drainage outlets helped
drain the burrows quickly, showing they could move manure quickly as well.
Injecting liquid manure under pressure may further increase its flow rate into
drainpipes through worm holes.
Often such rapid leaching is via cracks in the soil or bedrock, through
which polluted water flows, but there were no visible cracks in the fields
studied. Another possible cause of waste drainage is overapplying liquid
manure. But this was not the case in the Ohio
experiments, in which the scientists were careful to apply only as much liquid
manure as the soil could hold without becoming saturated.
Earthworm burrows can have a greater effect than soil cracks on chemical and
manure movement because the burrows tend to stay open year round, while soil
cracks tend to close up when the soil gets wet.
The scientists also filled the wormholes with a plastic resin to create molds
of them. They studied the molds to see whether wormhole geometry had anything
to do with speeding the flow of water to the pipes. It didn't. But they were
able to predict waterflow speed based on the holes' proximity to the pipes.
Shut It Off!
One possible solution would be to avoid injecting liquid manure within 2
feet of a drainage pipe, if pipe locations are known. Another possibility would
be to break up wormholes by tilling the surface above each pipe before applying
manure.
"The most practical and best suggestion, though," Shipitalo says,
"would be to install shutoff valves so the drains can be shut during
manure application and for a short time afterwards. Ohio farmers are currently doing this, with
cost-sharing from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
"Catch basins could be another answer," he continues. "These
pits would collect water draining from the pipes at the field edges and capture
it for reuse. These techniques would help whether the manure was leaking
through wormholes, soil cracks, of other openings."
This research is part of Water Quality
and Management, an ARS National Prograto (#201) described on the World Wide Web
at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Martin J. Shipitalo is with the
USDA-ARS North Appalachian Experimental Watershed Laboratory
Frank Gibbs is with the USDA-Natural
Resources Conservation Service
|