The circularity of
nitrogen in swine finishing production refers to the management and utilization
of nitrogen within the swine production system to minimize waste. Nitrogen is
an essential nutrient for pigs, but its improper management can lead to
environmental issues such as water pollution, ammonia loss, and greenhouse gas
emissions. The concept of circularity refers to the percent or fraction of
nitrogen that is kept within the cycle and can be used again.
Nitrogen circularity in
swine finishing encompasses at least four areas.
- Feed Management: Balancing the
feed composition with the pig's nutritional requirements minimizes
nitrogen in manure. Nitrogen is lost during manure storage and recycling
for crop production. As such, maximizing nitrogen retention in the pig is
critical for improved circularity. However, the choice of managing manure
as a waste or resource is often dictated by the ability of farmers to use
the manure more cost-effectively than commercial fertilizer could be
applied. If manure is treated as a waste, typically, circularity is
reduced. Finally, diet ingredient selection impacts system efficiency by
its relationship to crop production and crop selection and the nitrogen
use efficacy in the cropping system.
- Manure Management: Efficient
handling and treatment of swine manure can minimize nitrogen losses and
environmental impacts. During manure storage, nitrogen is volatilized to
the atmosphere and lost. Technologies such as anaerobic digestion, impermeable
covers, and acidification can help reduce this loss. Retaining nitrogen
for recycling for crop production is critical for circularity.
- Nutrient Management: Implementing
nutrient management plans on swine farms can guide the appropriate
application of manure to cropland, ensuring optimal nitrogen utilization.
By matching the nutrient content of manure with the crop's nutrient
requirements, over-application can be avoided, reducing the risk of
nitrogen loss and increasing circularity. Manure application method and
timing strongly impact the ability to recover applied nitrogen.
- Crop Rotation and Cover Crops:
Integrating crop rotation and cover crops into the farming system can
improve nitrogen cycling. Selection of rotations can reduce nitrogen need
for subsequent crops and increase yield relative to limited rotations.
Nitrogen-fixing cover crops, such as legumes, can capture atmospheric
nitrogen and make it available to subsequent crops. Cover crops have been
shown to reduce nitrogen leaching, potentially keeping more nitrogen in
the profile for use by subsequent crops.
Figure 1. Corn-soybean meal diet with a deep pit manure storage and manure applied using Iowa yield goal and commercial fertilizer applied at MRTN.
Figure 4. Corn-DDGS diet with a lagoon manure storage and manure applied using Iowa yield goal and commercial fertilizer applied at MRTN.
Each figure shows
a nitrogen flow through the swine finishing cycle, including an estimate for
nitrogen fixation by the soybean. There are many ways of interpreting the
cycle, but I like to start with efficiency as an engineer. Efficiency is
defined as wanted output/inputs. In this case, the output would be the nitrogen
in the pig. Nitrogen inputs include the amino acid and synthetic fertilizer
nitrogen purchased to support crop production. Soybean complicates this
slightly –the nitrogen they provide is an input, but some of the nitrogen comes
from biological fixation and the rest from the soil. As I can't find a
reference for how to include them, I will estimate biological fixation and use
that fraction as an input.
Another metric
that is receiving more discussion is circularity. One means of defining
circularity is the percent of required nitrogen inputs obtained by recycling.
This would be the amount of nitrogen land applied with manures compared to the
total nitrogen needed for fertilizer (both manure and synthetic fertilizer) and
the amino acids in the feed. This might be termed "self-reliance"
circularity as it is the fraction of circularity an integrated farm could
control.
An alternative
circularity metric is the "recycling rate." The recycling rate is the
percentage of recycled products available for recycling. In our examples, this
would be the land-applied manure compared to the as excreted manure plus the
nitrogen in the pig. At first glance, including the nitrogen in the pig sounds
funny as it is the product, and we want it to be consumed. However, nitrogen is
available for recycling at the slaughter and rendering plant and in the human
wastewater treatment system, and including this term recognizes that fact and
shows how urban locations and areas of consumption must find ways to recover
this nutrient to create circular systems.
Table 1. System comparisons on different
performance metrics including efficiency and two circularity metrics.
System |
System Efficiency |
Self-Reliance Circularity |
Recycling Rate Circularity |
Corn-Soy Deep Pit |
67 |
71 |
52 |
Corn-Soy Lagoon |
51 |
46 |
32 |
Corn-DDGS Deep Pit |
43 |
42 |
54 |
Corn-DDGS Lagoon |
35 |
27 |
34 |
The recycling rate
tells how well we return potential residues into places of value. Nutrients
lost to volatilization during manure collection and storage are challenges that
must be addressed. While deep pit storages are an improvement over lagoons,
innovation is needed to help improve recycling rates further. Nutrients
exported with the pig may or may not be recycled depending on what happens at
the slaughter facility, the rendering plant, and the human wastewater treatment
plant. Within this analysis, I excluded them as they are beyond my scope;
however, for a better idea of how the agricultural system is performing, this
needs to be included and must be addressed, as these nutrient exports are on
the same order of magnitude as nitrogen losses during lagoon storage.
Self-reliance
circularity indicates what percent of the nitrogen needs are supplied by items
an integrated crop-livestock farm (or system) could control. An alternative way
of viewing this number is 100 minus the self-reliance circularity is our
reliance on nitrogen sources outside the farm's control. An integrated cropping
and swine finishing farm with a deep pit manure storage is currently proving
around 71% of the nitrogen it needs to feed a pig and fertilize its crops. An
interesting take-home here is that using soybean to biologically fix some of
the nitrogen for the diet improves self-reliance circularity significantly as
it reduces nitrogen demand to the following crop and provides nitrogen to the
manure that didn't originate from synthetic fertilizer or recycling materials.
This metric could also be improved by reducing ammonia losses during manure
collection and storage, improving rate selection for manure as a fertilizer
(probably mostly through improved application timing), and innovating ways to recycle
nitrogen that ends up at the slaughter, rendering, and human wastewater
treatment facilities.
Finally, we have
the system efficiency metric. This metric again favored soybean-based diets,
though in this case, this was at least in part due to diet formulations that
facilitated greater nitrogen retention in the pig and less excretion and at
least in part from reduced nitrogen inputs needed to achieve corn production.
This metric could also be improved by reducing ammonia volatilization during
collection and storage, as demonstrated by the differences between the lagoon
and deep pit systems.
A few caveats –
this is by no means an end-all-be-all analysis. Many assumptions were made to
facilitate the analysis; for example, I compared nutrient removal with corn
grain to the nitrogen fertilizer application rate to facilitate calculations
rather than trying to estimate N losses with nitrate leaching, surface water
runoff, or denitrification losses. In doing so, I inherently assumed nitrogen
additions through deposition didn't matter and that the soil nitrogen level was
in equilibrium and unchanging. Similarly, I looked at nitrogen soybeans fixed
from the atmosphere and didn't show nitrogen losses during their production.
Water measurements in tiled fields show nitrogen leaching in these production
systems. Similarly, co-products are produced from both diets – either soybean
oil or ethanol. While neither contains nitrogen and thus doesn't impact my
analysis with these parameters, recognizing that the system is more complicated
and contributing other goods is important in using these metrics.
All this is a
fancy way of saying things we already know. We, agricultural and agricultural
researchers, need (1) to innovate new solutions that help reduce ammonia losses
during manure collection and storage, (2) improve nitrogen rate selection with
fertilizers but especially manures (again probably through innovations that
facilitate improvements in manure application timing), (3) be mindful of how
crop rotation effects alter nutrient needs and alternative in-field management
practices (like cover crops) could alter losses and our ability to recycle
nutrients, and (4) that on-farm management only goes so far and that recycling
of consumed nutrients from urban areas where livestock products are consumed
has almost as large of impact on nitrogen recycling metrics as the ammonia
volatilization losses.
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