ProjectsAn Evaluation of the Storage and Movement of Potential Contaminants in Soils at a Confined Feeding Operation |
|

Map of Daviess County, Indiana, showing the area susceptible to ground-water
contamination by nitrates (shaded area). Criteria used in this analysis
were: area covered by row crops, permeable surface materials (alluvium
or outwash), and a shallow water table (less than or equal to 25 feet).
Click
the map to see a larger view.
Map by Sally Letsinger.
Several Confined Feeding Operations (CFOs) are being operated in the sandy soils of southwestern Indiana. Notwithstanding the efforts of the operations to comply with environmental directives and to ensure minimal impacts on ground and surface water in the area, there is no certainty that currently recommended best management practices (BMPs) are effective in every hydrogeologic setting. Ground water in this hydrogeologic setting (highly permeable soils and shallow water table) is presumably very sensitive to contamination. This potential sensitivity to ground- and surface-water contamination warrants a thorough investigation of the effective limits of current management practices.
Data from shallow monitoring wells in similar settings indicate that nitrate concentrations in water-table aquifers are often high; it is our hypothesis that this occurs because rainfall events early and late in the growing season are producing wetting fronts that flush nitrate from commercial fertilizers and animal waste through the soil zone before they can be used to promote plant growth. The study, which is supported by the U.S Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Water Act Section 104(b)(3) program, is aimed at evaluating this hypothesis by using data collected from a working CFO. Through an intensive program of monitoring, we are attempting to track the effects that current manure-application practices have on ground-water quality in the area. The data and associated calculations generated in this study can be used by personnel of the Office of Land Quality of the Indiana Department of Environmental Management to modify their permitting criteria. Such changes may eventually include modification of current management practices, particularly with respect to the timing and rates of waste application.
Installation of hydrologic monitoring equipment. Shown
here are soil- temperature probes and gypsum soil-moisture blocks.
Photo by Sally Letsinger.
Approach
This study was conducted near the town of Washington, Daviess County,
Indiana. Our study involved installation of hydrologic instrumentation
and sampling devices that allowed a detailed hydrochemical budget to be
developed for the waste application fields in the area of concern. Three
sites were monitored: two on fields that received animal waste applications
(in this case, turkey manure) and the other (a control site) on a field
that received commercial fertilizer applications. Once the necessary data
wascollected, we were able to accurately quantify storage
and movement of ground water and solutes in the unsaturated zone, and
rates of contaminant-loading of the shallow aquifer. Application rates
of manure and commercial fertilizer supplied by the operators were
compared along with weather conditions, antecedent soil moisture levels,
and season, to changes in the nitrogen concentrations in the unsaturated
and saturated zones.
Project Design
The following monitoring equipment was installed in late July 2003: (1)
A centrally located micrometeorological tower fitted with sensors for
measuring net radiation, relative humidity, air temperature, and wind
speed (these instruments allow measurement of potential evapotranspiration);
(2) rain gauge for measuring precipitation; and (3) at each study site,
a monitoring well equipped with a pressure transducer and a specific conductivity
meter, a neutron soil-moisture gauge access tube, soil-temperature probes,
soil-tension sensors, and pressure vacuum water samplers. Soil-temperature
probes, soil-tension sensors, and pressure vacuum soil-water samplers
were installed at three depths (shallow = 0.5 m; middle = 1.0 m; deep
= 2.0 m).

Ground-water and soil-water samples are collected and
analyzed biweekly in addition to continuous measurements recorded by
a datalogger.
Photo by Anna Makowski.
Biweekly visits to the three study sites provided an opportunity to download electronically monitored data, measure soil moisture profiles, and collect water samples. Water samples were collected from the monitoring wells and from the pressure vacuum soil-water samplers. The samples were analyzed for dissolved oxygen, electrical conductivity, pH, oxidation-reduction potential, nitrate as nitrogen, ammonia as nitrogen, chlorine, phosphate, and potassium. By combining measurements of hydrological conditions with laboratory data on nutrients, we were able to develop a detailed hydrochemical budget with a focus on nitrogen.
Results
The monitoring results demonstrate a relationship
between recharge to the aquifer and nitrate loading of the shallow ground
water. Gravity drainage occurs when soil tension is below field capacity.
During these periods of recharge, nitrate is leached from the rooting
zone and is flushed deeper into the subsurface. The data collected during out study indicate
that pressure vacuum soil-water samplers respond to recharge with a lag
increasing with the depth of the sampler (tracking migration of the wetting front). During short periods of gravity
drainage, the effect is seen primarily in the shallow subsurface. Higher
nitrate levels appear in the deep pressure vacuum soil-water sampler and
monitoring well after longer periods of gravity drainage, which correspond
to larger recharge events. Recharge events are visible in the graph below
as increases in water-table elevation. The graph also shows that, in general, the highest nitrate
levels in the saturated zone occur in the winter/early spring recharge period. Nitrate is transported in solution from
surface application of fertilizer (organic or commerical) to the water
table.
A significant outcome of the monitoring and modeling of nitrate fluxes was the observation that once the manure applications were suspended, the nitrate loading of the water table declined to values that were very comparable to those determined for the control site. The lower loading rates associated with the use of commercial fertilizer have to do with the time of application; a spring application corresponds to the growing season and the nitrogen is utilized by plants.
Calculated nitrate loading

Graph showing results of water levels and nitrate concentrations from 2003-2006. Click graph for a larger view.
Recommendations
The IDEM CFO/CAFO program is based on the Confined Feeding Control Law administered through regulations adopted under the Water Pollution Control Board. The focus of the regulations is to protect water quality. The program provides oversight to CFO/CAFO operations in an effort to ensure that waste storage structures are designed, constructed and maintained in a structurally sound manner, and that manure is handled and land applied in an environmentally acceptable manner. Several pieces of legislation govern the way that CFO/CAFO operations are permitted, approved, and maintained.
Geology | GIS/Maps | About Us | Bookstore | Interactive Maps | Licensing
IGSInfo@indiana.edu / 812-855-7636
Accessibility Information
Copyright, Map Disclaimer, and Limitation of Warranties and Liability