A Comparison of Two Modes of Dairy Farming Intensification and the Impact on Water Quality in Ohio, USA
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Site Description
2.1.1. Sugar Creek, OH, USA: Two Culturally Distinct Sub-Watersheds
2.1.2. Two Modes of Dairy Farm Intensification
2.2. Farm Survey
- (a)
- The description of the main characteristics of the farm structure: land ownership, farm acreage composition by crops, hay, and other land uses; animal production on the farm including the number of animals per type; labor force on the farm.
- (b)
- The identification of the farm territory: we define here the farm territory as the total fields managed by the farmer, including cropland, hayfields, and pasture. All the fields were reported on a map during the interviews with the farmers or when it was available checked on the maps established by the Farm Service Agency. Then a Geographical Information System (GIS) was created with all the fields of the farms surveyed. The land use for each field was collected for the cropping year 2006.
- (c)
- The land management through crop and animal management, where we focused on: (1) crop rotations and their spatial organization over the fields of the farm. For that, we utilized the methodologies described by Maxime et al. (1995) and Morlon and Benoit (1990) [32,33], which have already been explained and used in combination by Joannon et al. (2006) [34]; (2) animal feeding, as it has a direct impact on land management and explains partly the land use of the farm.
2.3. Water Data
2.3.1. Discharge Assessment
2.3.2. Water Quality Monitoring
2.3.3. Habitat and Biological Assessments
3. Results
3.1. Farm Survey
3.1.1. Farm Structure and Farming Systems
3.1.2. Landscape Patterns and Crop Rotations
- on drained bottomland with water-logging constraint there was continuous corn or corn and soybean rotations;
- oppositely, on sandy hills there were continuous hayfields;
- on the remaining stony fields, and on fields too steep to be tilled there was pasture.
3.2. Water Quality Results
3.2.1. Discharge Estimation
3.2.2. Nutrient Concentrations
3.2.3. Habitat and Biological Assessments
4. Discussion
4.1. On the Complexity of the Concept of “Sustainable Intensification”
4.2. Potential Organic Nutrient Pressure on Streams from Farms
4.3. Potential Role of Manure Storage and Application
4.4. Impact of Farming Systems and Management on Stream Water Quality
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Intensification Characteristics | Amish South Fork | East Branch |
---|---|---|
Type of Intensification | Automatic milking machines and herd expansion with land size constant | Land and herd size scale increase |
Date of Major Intensification Starting Event | 1996—Debate in each church district about social and economic values of hand versus automatic milking | 1975—Agriculture vocational education teacher recommended scale increase for profit |
Scale of Intensification | 20% increase in herd size | 200–500% herd increase; 2 CAFOs |
Key Technological Changes | Milking machines; bulk tanks, solar electric fences, increase in off-farm inputs mainly for feed | Capital intensive dairy parlors; sand for bedding; round bales, silage hay; many off-farm inputs especially for feeding; high-yielding corn varieties |
Key Land Use Changes | Increase in and conversion of pastures to intensive and rotational grazing by milking cows and heifers; increase in corn in the rotation | Pastures used only for dry cows and heifers; increase in cash cropping for corn or soybeans |
Settlement Pattern | Small farms of about 80 acres with three generations living together, fissioning of church and small parochial school districts due to population increase | Larger farms of 200 to 1350 cows |
Social Organizational Changes | Population increase; fissioning of church and school districts | Buffer and Manure Group formed; increase in hired labor |
Production | Amish Watershed 1 | Non-Amish Watershed |
---|---|---|
Dairy with milking cows | 11 (2 with draft horses business) | 5 (2 with cash crops/hay business) |
Dairy with only heifers | 1 | 2 (both with cash crops/hay business) |
Poultry | 1 | none |
Mixed livestock | none | 1 |
Off-farm job, full time, with a Non-dairy production on-farm | 4 | 3 |
Category | Amish Watershed 1 | Non-Amish Watershed |
---|---|---|
Farmed land 2 | 16 to 54 (32) | 14 to 747 (266) |
Tillable land 2 | 0 to 35 (19) | 5 to 731 (250) |
Crops sold (% total land) 3 | 0 to 37% (5) 3 | 0 to 100% (7) 3 |
Number of milking cows 4 | 9 to 28 (23) | 297 to 460 (310) |
Level of production 5 | 6500 to 9440 (7182) | 9000 to 13,500 (11,340) |
Other livestock | Horses: 150 on 17 farms Chickens: 90,000 to 120,000 per year (3 farms) | 1 mixed livestock (sold per year: lambs (65), beefs (105), hogs (650) |
Variable | Kendall’s Tau | p-Value |
---|---|---|
All discharge | 0.05 | <0.001 |
Discharge >75% | −0.06 | 0.008 |
Discharge <25% | 0.05 | 0.02 |
Site | Phosphate | Tot P | Nitrate | Ammonia | Tot N |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
All samples concentration (mg/L) | |||||
East Branch | 0.115 c | 0.167 b | 2.315 a | 0.349 a | 3.246 a |
South Fork | 0.255 a | 0.325 a | 2.646 a | 0.297 a | 3.641 a |
Confluence | 0.183 b | 0.246 ab | 2.494 a | 0.320 a | 3.302 a |
High discharge samples concentration (mg/L) | |||||
East Branch | 0.142 a | 0.205 a | 3.488 a | 0.417 a | 4.838 a |
South Fork | 0.266 a | 0.406 a | 3.642 a | 0.440 a | 4.571 a |
Confluence | 0.207 a | 0.319 a | 3.673 a | 0.391 a | 4.420 a |
Low discharge samples concentration (mg/L) | |||||
East Branch | 0.125 b | 0.176 b | 1.011 b | 0.411 a | 1.875 b |
South Fork | 0.303 a | 0.392 a | 2.043 a | 0.284 a | 3.187 a |
Confluence | 0.202 ab | 0.267 ab | 1.469 b | 0.365 a | 2.310 b |
Site | Phosphate | Tot P | Nitrate | Ammonia | Tot N |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
All samples | |||||
East Branch | −0.01 | 0.19 | 0.03 | −0.3 | −0.02 |
South Fork | −0.19 | −0.01 | −0.04 | −0.4 | −0.08 |
Confluence | −0.15 | 0.03 | −0.02 | −0.35 | −0.04 |
High discharge samples | |||||
East Branch | −0.32 | −0.1 | −0.27 | −0.25 | −0.37 |
South Fork | −0.25 | −0.18 | −0.29 | −0.47 | −0.37 |
Confluence | −0.37 | −0.14 | −0.27 | −0.45 | −0.3 |
Low discharge samples | |||||
East Branch | 0.17 | 0.23 | 0.12 | −0.22 | −0.08 |
South Fork | −0.25 | −0.19 | 0.05 | −0.47 | −0.06 |
Confluence | −0.13 | −0.01 | 0.22 | −0.39 | 0.1 |
STORET | Watershed | IBI 1998 | IBI 2017 | QHEI 1998 | QHEI 2017 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
R05W18 | Confluence | 29 | 34 | 48 | 50.8 |
R05S56 | East Branch | 24 | 40 | 42 | 50.5 |
R05S57 | East Branch | 24 | 28 | 45.5 | 54 |
R05S59 | East Branch | 24 | 30 | 31 | 39.5 |
R05W19 | East Branch | 26 | 36 | 23 | 52.5 |
R05W36 | East Branch | 22 | 32 | 44.5 | 46 |
East Branch Mean | 24 * | 33.2 * | 37.2 * | 48.5 *,^ | |
R05P23 | South Fork | 18 | 28 | 28.5 | 39.3 |
R05S41 | South Fork | 20 | 24 | 35.5 | 29.5 |
R05S64 | South Fork | 22 | 12 | 35 | 38 |
R05S66 | South Fork | 28 | 34 | 27 | 42 |
R05W38 | South Fork | 28 | 30 | 28.5 | 41.3 |
South Fork Mean | 23.2 | 25.6 | 30.9 * | 38.02 *,^ |
kg P2O5/ha | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0–15 | 15–30 | 30–45 | 45–60 | 60–75 | +140 | ||
N kg/ha | 0–25 | 2 NA | |||||
25–50 | 3 A/1 NA | ||||||
50–75 | 2 A/2 NA | 2 A/1 NA | |||||
75–100 | 5 A/2 NA | ||||||
100–125 | 2 A/2 NA | ||||||
125–150 | 1 NA | ||||||
+290 | 3 A |
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Joannon, A.; Moore, R.H.; Lyon, S.W.; Miller, S.A.; Baudry, J. A Comparison of Two Modes of Dairy Farming Intensification and the Impact on Water Quality in Ohio, USA. Sustainability 2022, 14, 6201. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14106201
Joannon A, Moore RH, Lyon SW, Miller SA, Baudry J. A Comparison of Two Modes of Dairy Farming Intensification and the Impact on Water Quality in Ohio, USA. Sustainability. 2022; 14(10):6201. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14106201
Chicago/Turabian StyleJoannon, Alexandre, Richard H. Moore, Steve W. Lyon, Samuel A. Miller, and Jacques Baudry. 2022. "A Comparison of Two Modes of Dairy Farming Intensification and the Impact on Water Quality in Ohio, USA" Sustainability 14, no. 10: 6201. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14106201
APA StyleJoannon, A., Moore, R. H., Lyon, S. W., Miller, S. A., & Baudry, J. (2022). A Comparison of Two Modes of Dairy Farming Intensification and the Impact on Water Quality in Ohio, USA. Sustainability, 14(10), 6201. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14106201