Manure treatment and recycling technologies

2022 ◽  
pp. 161-180
Author(s):  
Renjie Dong ◽  
Wei Qiao ◽  
Jianbin Guo ◽  
Hui Sun
Keyword(s):  
2007 ◽  
Vol 28 (12) ◽  
pp. 1403-1418 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. B. M⊘ller ◽  
H. S. Jensen ◽  
L. Tobiasen ◽  
M. N. Hansen

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Rickard ◽  
Marcos Paradelo Perez ◽  
Aurelie Bacq-Labreuil ◽  
Andy Neal ◽  
Xiaoxian Zhang ◽  
...  

<p>Soil organic matter is associated with important biological and physical functions. There are many theories to interpret this association, as yet there is not a fully developed understanding linking soil properties to nutritional management in arable systems.</p><p>We used X-ray computed tomography to analyse soil structure at the core and aggregate scale on the Broadbalk long term experiment (Hertfordshire, England). Here we present results of the treatments that have been under continuous wheat for 175 years. Corresponding to treatments that the only difference between the treatments is the nutrient management regime, with the exception of the baseline, or ‘wilderness’ treatment in which the plot was left unmanaged and has returned to mature woodland since 1882. The other nutrient treatments correspond to inorganic fertiliser addition with and without phosphorus, farmyard manure, and no added nutrient.</p><p>At core scale (40 µm resolution) we capture macro pore structures that are responsible for convective flow, while the aggregate scale images (1.5 µm resolution) include structures responsible for retention of water by capillary forces.  Therefore, a comparison of images taken at the two resolutions 1.5 µm and 40 µm provides information on how soil partitions between drainage and storage of water, and therefore on the air water balance under different environmental contexts.</p><p>The results are presented as a state-space plot of simulated permeability vs. porosity for each treatment. We find that nutrient management resulted in two distinct states at aggregate scale corresponding to water storage potential. Inorganic nutrient management resulted in structures of lower porosity and lower simulated permeability. There was no significant difference between each treatment, or between these treatments and the treatment with no nutrient addition. By comparison, the wilderness and manure treatments had higher porosity and higher permeability, with no significant difference between them.</p><p>At core scale, the results are slightly different. Again, the inorganic nutrient management treatments had lower porosity and simulated permeability, with no significant difference between them, and between them and the treatment with no nutrient addition. However, the manure treatment had a significantly lower porosity and permeability than the wilderness treatment. We conclude that long-term cultivation with organic nutrient management results in a similar capacity for water storage and transport to roots than a wilderness control, but that long-term management using a purely inorganic nutrient regime results in a smaller capacity for water storage and a lower transport rate to roots. Organic inputs, roots and plant detritus ploughed into the soil after harvest had no significant impact. Infiltration potential is highest in the wilderness control, lower for the manure treatment, and lowest for the inorganic nutrient management treatment. Again, inputs of organic nutrients from plants had no significant impact. We interpret these findings in terms of a previously hypothesised self-organising feedback loop between microbial activity and soil structure.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 273 ◽  
pp. 506-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lu Wang ◽  
Min Addy ◽  
Jie Liu ◽  
Caitlyn Nekich ◽  
Renchuan Zhang ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 451-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter Mulbry ◽  
Elizabeth Kebede Westhead ◽  
Carolina Pizarro ◽  
Lawrence Sikora

Author(s):  
F. Pacurar ◽  
I. Rotar

To receive precise results of manure influences on Festuca rubra meadows were studied on to types of soils: Terra rossa and Brown eu – mezobasic rendzina. Manure graduate dosages were established as: V1 - control, V2 - 10 t/ha manure, V3 - 20 t/ha manure, V4 - 30 t/ha manure. Changes on herbal phytocenoses are very close depending to the type of soils. The 20 and 30 t/ha of manure treatment applied increase the installation of the Poacee species in front of the Fabacee species and plant from other botanical families, but the treatment with 10 t/ha of manure maintain the equilibrium of the 3 mention groups because minimal changes are happens.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng Zhou ◽  
Jining Zhang ◽  
Guoyan Zou ◽  
Shohei Riya ◽  
Masaaki Hosomi

To evaluate the feasibility of swine manure treatment by a proposed Dry Thermophilic Anaerobic Digestion (DT-AD) system, we evaluated the methane yield of swine manure treated using a DT-AD method with rice straw under different C/N ratios and solid retention time (SRT) and calculated the mass and energy balances when the DT-AD system is used for swine manure treatment from a model farm with 1000 pigs and the digested residue is used for forage rice production. A traditional swine manure treatment Oxidation Ditch system was used as the study control. The results suggest that methane yield using the proposed DT-AD system increased with a higher C/N ratio and shorter SRT. Correspondently, for the DT-AD system running with SRT of 80 days, the net energy yields for all treatments were negative, due to low biogas production and high heat loss of digestion tank. However, the biogas yield increased when the SRT was shortened to 40 days, and the generated energy was greater than consumed energy when C/N ratio was 20:1 and 30:1. The results suggest that with the correct optimization of C/N ratio and SRT, the proposed DT-AD system, followed by using digestate for forage rice production, can attain energy self-sufficiency.


2001 ◽  
Vol 44 (9) ◽  
pp. 269-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Edeogu ◽  
J. Feddes ◽  
R. Coleman ◽  
J. Leonard

The effects of agitation, liquid-only manure, depth and time on odour emission rates were investigated. Manure storage tanks were filled to incremental depths every two weeks. At each depth odour samples were collected twice. The second sample was collected seven days after the first. Odour concentration was measured with an olfactometer. Three different pig-manure treatments were investigated. In one treatment, slurry manure in a storage tank was agitated before and during odour sampling. In a second treatment, the settlable solids in manure were removed gravimetrically over 24 hours and liquid manure was pumped to a storage tank. In the third treatment (control), odour samples were collected from unseparated and undisturbed slurry manure. Overall, the odour emission rates in the agitated manure treatment ranged between 0.39 and 1.02 ou s−1 m−2, increased with depth and decreased with time, i.e. after seven days at each depth. In the liquid-only manure treatment, the emission rates ranged between 0.09 and 0.69 ou s−1 m−2, increased with depth but the effect of time was not evident. In the control treatment, the emission rates ranged between 0.20 and 0.66 ou s−1 m−2 and increased with depth on the first odour sampling day but decreased with depth on the second sampling day.


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