How us farmers are tackling pollution in the gulf of mexico - farmers weekly
How us farmers are tackling pollution in the gulf of mexico - farmers weekly"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
©Design Pics Inc/Rex/Shutterstock Nutrient run-off from agricultural land is being blamed for the vast oceanic dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico and farmers have responded by adopting measures
more commonly seen in the EU, such as buffer strips. Dead fish floating belly-up in a sea of green slime – this is the Gulf of Mexico’s hypoxic (deprived of oxygen) zone, an area where
pollution is so bad little can survive. Spanning a record 8,776 sq miles at its peak this summer, the dead zone spews from the mouth of the Mississippi river due to its high nutrient
loading. So what is being done about it? See also: Why phosphate fertiliser use on crops may have to change WHAT IS EUTROPHICATION? High nitrate and phosphate concentrations in river and sea
water cause rapid proliferation of algae, otherwise known as algal blooms or eutrophication. These block the sunlight from plants in the water, which then die and decompose, using up oxygen
in the water. Eventually the oxygen levels get so low (less than 2ppm) that animal life cannot survive. The Hypoxia Task Force, set up in 1997 to understand the causes and effects of
eutrophication (excessive richness in nutrients) in the Gulf of Mexico, has set a target to reduce the hypoxic area to 1,950sq miles by 2035, with a 20% reduction in nitrogen and phosphate
loadings by 2025. It has pioneered a national strategy to reduce pollution from important watersheds feeding the area and one of the largest of these is the Mississippi river, which drains
much of the USA, from Montana to Pennsylvania. REDUCTION STRATEGIES Diffuse pollution from farming practices is one of the main focuses, and the national government has tasked individual
states to come up with their own reduction strategies. Farm funding is available through the US Department of Agriculture and Environmental Protection Agency (See “The Conservation Reserve
Programme”, below). However, to broaden the reach of good environmental practice individual states are implementing their own programmes, encouraging farmers to change their management
voluntarily. Iowa and Illinois, which border the Mississippi, are the two largest soya-producing states in the USA, with similarly large areas of maize and a high proportion of pig
producers. Both are making big strides in reducing nutrient run-off through more sustainable farming practices. The Iowa and Illinois Soybean Associations run extensive environmental
programmes backed by on-farm research. This is funded by the commodity checkoff programme, similar to UK levy boards, where money is raised from production to fund marketing and research for
that industry. In 2017, the Iowan association budget ran to $11m (£7.9m), about half of which will be spent on research and development. Using aerial and on-farm mapping the Iowa Soybean
Association (ISA) helps farmers to produce conservation plans, highlighting sensitive areas to pull out of production, giving advice on using cover crops and min-till, as well as how to
create terraces and install denitrifying bioreactors. “These bioreactors divert water from land drains to woodchip pits, cutting nitrate levels by 50-60%,” says Heath Ellison, operations
manager of agriculture and natural resources. HOW SUCCESSFUL HAS IT BEEN? According to Mr Ellison the acreage of cover crops has doubled each year in recent years. There are now 0.6m
hectares of conservation buffers and 40,000ha of wetland restoration in Iowa, helping farmers to slash their soil erosion by nearly 50% between 1982 and 2013. However, it’s a very different
approach to European water quality, which is managed through comprehensive legislation. There is very little formal regulation covering diffuse pollution in the US, with farmers doing their
best on a relatively piecemeal basis. Some studies show nitrate loads in the Mississippi have not declined since the 1980s and claim a 59% cut is required to reach the task force’s target
area. So what more can be done? CHANGE IN MINDSET According to Matt Liebman, from Iowa State University, there needs to be a mindset change among farmers who have historically put as large
an acreage into production as possible. “In the EU you already know that you can produce more with less, but it’s a new story here,” he explains. “If you take 10% of the watershed and put it
into perennial cover you will get disproportionately large benefits, for example, a 95% reduction in sediment export.” With a common rotation of soya and maize, the introduction of a third
crop, such as oats or alfalfa, may also help, says Craig Chase from Iowa University. “It would reduce inputs and should be more profitable – but the markets for anything other than corn and
soya beans here aren’t very good.” With margins under intense pressure, farmers are increasingly looking at curbing inputs to maximise profits, with precision farming playing a huge role in
conservation agriculture, adds Dr Liebman. “It’s not intuitive that growing less crop will make more money, but it is beginning to resonate.” THE CONSERVATION RESERVE PROGRAMME (CRP) The CRP
offers a yearly rental payment to farmers in exchange for removing environmentally sensitive land from agricultural production and planting species that will improve environmental quality.
Payments are also available to cover 50% of establishing the practice, with other incentive payments for continuous practices. There are 9.5m hectares under contract in the US (of a total
farmed acreage of 368m hectares). Best practice messages for UK farmers: * Watershed approach * No-till and buffer strips with precision farming techniques * Partnership programmes *
Part-funded through farm levies.
Trending News
Coldplay conundrum: how to reduce the risk of failure for environmental projectsNew Zealand’s government has committed to planting one billion trees as part of a transition to a low-emission economy, ...
Killings in gaza, new embassy in jerusalem, and peace as distant as ever (published 2018)JERUSALEM — Across the Gaza Strip on Monday morning, loudspeakers on minarets urged Palestinians to rush the fence borde...
New space race fuels plans for lunar petrol stationEleven days before the _Apollo 11 _astronauts set off for the moon in July 1969, Neil Armstrong was asked whether he wou...
British navy humanitarian aid ship to visit puerto barrios, guatemalaWorld news story BRITISH NAVY HUMANITARIAN AID SHIP TO VISIT PUERTO BARRIOS, GUATEMALA * English * Español de América La...
Bbl 9: shane watson previews sydney sixersTweet Share Copy URL Series Preview 84 videos Champions of the inaugural edition of BBL, Sydney Sixers are also the only...
Latests News
How us farmers are tackling pollution in the gulf of mexico - farmers weekly©Design Pics Inc/Rex/Shutterstock Nutrient run-off from agricultural land is being blamed for the vast oceanic dead zone...
In michigan, presidential and u. S. Senate races extremely closeAARP Michigan has released its second 2024 statewide election survey, finding that candidates should pay close attention...
Ruth langsford's beau eamonn holmes mocks wife after 'broken' blunderThis Morning star Ruth Langsford, 60, took to Instagram and shared a heartwarming video alongside Eamonn Holmes, 60, sta...
Golden globes: 100+ pr firms warn hfpa they will cut off talent unless there is “transformational change”It’s bad enough for a Hollywood organization to invoke the ire of Time’s Up, the coalition formed in the wake of #MeToo ...
Missing nigerian schoolgirls News and Updates from The Economic Times - Page 1English EditionEnglish Editionहिन्दीગુજરાતીमराठीবাংলাಕನ್ನಡമലയാളംதமிழ்తెలుగు | 29 May, 2025, 01:26 AM IST | Today's ePape...