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Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Reducing inputs of nitrogen fertiliser and purchased feed, with an associated reduction in stocking rate on pastoral dairy farms resulted in less nitrate leaching. A co-benefit was a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. The exception was the implementation of a wintering barn where...

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Autores principales: Beukes, Pierre, Romera, Alvaro, Hutchinson, Kathryn, van der Weerden, Tony, de Klein, Cecile, Dalley, Dawn, Chapman, David, Glassey, Chris, Dynes, Robyn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6940747/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31861144
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9121158
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author Beukes, Pierre
Romera, Alvaro
Hutchinson, Kathryn
van der Weerden, Tony
de Klein, Cecile
Dalley, Dawn
Chapman, David
Glassey, Chris
Dynes, Robyn
author_facet Beukes, Pierre
Romera, Alvaro
Hutchinson, Kathryn
van der Weerden, Tony
de Klein, Cecile
Dalley, Dawn
Chapman, David
Glassey, Chris
Dynes, Robyn
author_sort Beukes, Pierre
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Reducing inputs of nitrogen fertiliser and purchased feed, with an associated reduction in stocking rate on pastoral dairy farms resulted in less nitrate leaching. A co-benefit was a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. The exception was the implementation of a wintering barn where nitrate leaching was reduced, but greenhouse gas emissions remained unchanged due to greater manure storage and handling. Emission reductions in the lower-input systems came at an average loss of profit of approximately NZ$100 per tonne CO(2)-equivalent. ABSTRACT: Between 2011 and 2016, small-scale farm trials were run across three dairy regions of New Zealand (Waikato, Canterbury, Otago) to compare the performance of typical regional farm systems with farm systems implementing a combination of mitigation options most suitable to the region. The trials ran for at least three consecutive years with detailed recording of milk production and input costs. Nitrate leaching per hectare of the milking platform (where lactating cows are kept) was estimated using either measurements (suction cups), models, or soil mineral nitrogen measurements. Post-trial, detailed farm information was used in the New Zealand greenhouse gas inventory methodology to calculate the emissions from all sources; dairy platform, dairy support land used for wintering non-lactating cows (where applicable) and replacement stock, and imported supplements. Nitrate leaching was also estimated for the support land and growing of supplements imported from off-farm using the same methods as for the platform. Operating profit (NZ$/ha/year), nitrate leaching (kg N/ha/year), and greenhouse gas emissions (t CO(2)-equivalent/ha/year) were all expressed per hectare of milking platform to enable comparisons across regions. Nitrate leaching mitigations adopted in lower-input (less purchased feed and nitrogen fertiliser) farm systems reduced leaching by 22 to 30 per cent, and greenhouse gas emissions by between nine and 24 per cent. The exception was the wintering barn system in Otago, where nitrate leaching was reduced by 45 per cent, but greenhouse gas emissions were unchanged due to greater manure storage and handling. Important drivers of a lower environmental footprint are reducing nitrogen fertiliser and purchased feed. Their effect is to reduce feed flow through the herd and drive down both greenhouse gas emissions and nitrate leaching. Emission reductions in the lower-input systems of Waikato and Canterbury came at an average loss of profit of approximately NZ$100/t CO(2)-equivalent (three to five per cent of industry-average profit per hectare).
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spelling pubmed-69407472020-01-09 Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching Beukes, Pierre Romera, Alvaro Hutchinson, Kathryn van der Weerden, Tony de Klein, Cecile Dalley, Dawn Chapman, David Glassey, Chris Dynes, Robyn Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Reducing inputs of nitrogen fertiliser and purchased feed, with an associated reduction in stocking rate on pastoral dairy farms resulted in less nitrate leaching. A co-benefit was a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. The exception was the implementation of a wintering barn where nitrate leaching was reduced, but greenhouse gas emissions remained unchanged due to greater manure storage and handling. Emission reductions in the lower-input systems came at an average loss of profit of approximately NZ$100 per tonne CO(2)-equivalent. ABSTRACT: Between 2011 and 2016, small-scale farm trials were run across three dairy regions of New Zealand (Waikato, Canterbury, Otago) to compare the performance of typical regional farm systems with farm systems implementing a combination of mitigation options most suitable to the region. The trials ran for at least three consecutive years with detailed recording of milk production and input costs. Nitrate leaching per hectare of the milking platform (where lactating cows are kept) was estimated using either measurements (suction cups), models, or soil mineral nitrogen measurements. Post-trial, detailed farm information was used in the New Zealand greenhouse gas inventory methodology to calculate the emissions from all sources; dairy platform, dairy support land used for wintering non-lactating cows (where applicable) and replacement stock, and imported supplements. Nitrate leaching was also estimated for the support land and growing of supplements imported from off-farm using the same methods as for the platform. Operating profit (NZ$/ha/year), nitrate leaching (kg N/ha/year), and greenhouse gas emissions (t CO(2)-equivalent/ha/year) were all expressed per hectare of milking platform to enable comparisons across regions. Nitrate leaching mitigations adopted in lower-input (less purchased feed and nitrogen fertiliser) farm systems reduced leaching by 22 to 30 per cent, and greenhouse gas emissions by between nine and 24 per cent. The exception was the wintering barn system in Otago, where nitrate leaching was reduced by 45 per cent, but greenhouse gas emissions were unchanged due to greater manure storage and handling. Important drivers of a lower environmental footprint are reducing nitrogen fertiliser and purchased feed. Their effect is to reduce feed flow through the herd and drive down both greenhouse gas emissions and nitrate leaching. Emission reductions in the lower-input systems of Waikato and Canterbury came at an average loss of profit of approximately NZ$100/t CO(2)-equivalent (three to five per cent of industry-average profit per hectare). MDPI 2019-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6940747/ /pubmed/31861144 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9121158 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Beukes, Pierre
Romera, Alvaro
Hutchinson, Kathryn
van der Weerden, Tony
de Klein, Cecile
Dalley, Dawn
Chapman, David
Glassey, Chris
Dynes, Robyn
Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching
title Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching
title_full Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching
title_fullStr Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching
title_full_unstemmed Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching
title_short Benefits and Trade-Offs of Dairy System Changes Aimed at Reducing Nitrate Leaching
title_sort benefits and trade-offs of dairy system changes aimed at reducing nitrate leaching
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6940747/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31861144
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9121158
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