USING STREAM BIOASSESSMENT PROTOCOLS TO MONITOR IMPACTS OF A CONFINED SWINE OPERATION1

The processing of waste from confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) presents a major environmental challenge. Treatment of waste and subsequent land application is a common best management practice (BMP) for these operations in Kentucky, USA, but there are few data assessing the effect of runoff...

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Published inJournal of the American Water Resources Association Vol. 42; no. 3; pp. 747 - 753
Main Authors Jack, Jeffrey, Kelley, Randall H., Stiles, David
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.06.2006
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Summary:The processing of waste from confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) presents a major environmental challenge. Treatment of waste and subsequent land application is a common best management practice (BMP) for these operations in Kentucky, USA, but there are few data assessing the effect of runoff from such operations on aquatic communities. The authors sampled a stream bordering a CAFO with a land application program to determine if runoff from the fertilized fields was adversely affecting stream communities. Water chemistry, periphyton, and macroinvertebrate samples from riffle habitats downstream of the CAFO were compared to samples collected from an upstream site and a control stream in 1999 and 2000. Riffle communities downstream of the fertilized fields had higher chlorophyll a levels than other sites, but there were no significant differences in macroinvertebrate numbers or in biometrics such as taxa richness among the sites. The BMP in place at this site may be effective in reducing this CAFO's impact on the stream; however, similar assessments at other CAFO sites should be done to assess their impacts. Functional measures such as nutrient retention and litter decomposition of streams impacted by CAFOs should also be investigated to ensure that these operations are not adversely affecting stream communities.
Bibliography:Respectively, Assistant Professor of Biology and Research Technician, Department of Biology and Stream Institute, University of Louisville, 139 Life Sciences, Louisville, Kentucky 40292; and Professor, Western Kentucky University, Department of Agriculture, 1 Big Red Way, Bowling Green, Kentucky 42101 (present address/Kelley: SoBran, Inc., c/o U.S. EPA, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268 (E‐Mail/Jack
Paper No. 04046 of the
JAWRA.
jeff.jack@louisville.edu
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ISSN:1093-474X
1752-1688
DOI:10.1111/j.1752-1688.2006.tb04489.x