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Animal
Production in the Upper Suwannee Watershed
Assessing the Water Quality Impact of Precision Farming
Integrated Resource Management in the Suwannee
River Basin
Irrigation
Technology and Management
Landscape Approach to Water Quality
People
and Water
Variable
Rate Irrigation
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George
Vellidis
"Today,
we see fewer and larger livestock operations. We see more water
quality problems. We also see a mass migration of large livestock
operations to regions with the least rules leaving our communities
with separate and unequal environmental and health protections.
For too long, this issue has been left to fester -- pitting neighbor
against neighbor, tearing communities apart. Some want an outright
ban on large operations; others want them heavily regulated. I think
all of us can see the writing on the wall. We must work together
to figure out how we preserve our health, our environment, and a
sustainable, economically viable livestock industry -- which accounts
for half of all sales in U.S. agriculture today."
U.S Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman
National Summit on Animal Waste Issues, May 5, 1998
The Gulf-Atlantic
Coastal Plain of Georgia region which is experiencing rapid growth
in animal confinement facilities, primarily in the poultry sector.
This project is a comprehensive, multidisciplinary, five-year study
initiated during February 1996 to provide the knowledge base for
the integration of increased animal production into the regional
agricultural system without sacrificing water quality.
The research will ultimately lead to development of guidelines for
management of animal agriculture based on landscape-scale environmental
quality considerations. Nineteen scientists from the University
of Georgia, the USDA-ARS Southeast Watershed Research Laboratory,
and the USDA-Natural Resources Conservation are involved with the
project. The general objectives of the project are:
- Assess the
current status of voluntary and regulatory approaches to protecting
environmental quality in animal agriculture and evaluate producer
acceptability to new guidelines.
- Determine
the current water quality effects of animal-based agriculture
in three different Coastal Plain ecoregions.
- Create/modify
spatially distributed data sets of the three representative watersheds
and map the location of existing and proposed animal production
and processing facilities in relation to other landscape features
which affect hydrology and water quality.
- Predict
the effect of land use and landscape configuration changes on
water quality at watershed and field scales.
- Develop
guidelines for management of animal agriculture based on landscape
scale environmental quality consideration
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To
understand the dynamics of water quality and animal agriculture
on a landscape scale, three watersheds, each approximately 150 square
miles in size, were identified in the Georgia coastal plain. The
three watersheds are representative of most hydrologic conditions
found in the coastal plain. In addition, one watershed is characterized
by intensive swine production, the second by poultry production,
and the third by traditional row-crop production. Water samples
are regularly collected from the streams draining these watersheds.
Samples are analyzed for parameters that determine the water quality
of streams and rivers. Resulting data are used to calibrate and
validate mathematical predictive tools so that the tool's users
can have confidence in its predictions.
Funding: This work was supported by funds from the USDA-CSREES
Special Grants Program and by Hatch and State funds allocated to
the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Stations.
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Research Team: George Vellidis, David Bosch, Jimmy Bradley, Rodney
Hill, Randy Odom, Richard Lowrance, Joe Sheridan, Kristin Smith, Jennifer
Suttles, Lynn Usery. |
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