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Decomposition of poultry litter organic matter co‐applied with industrial and agricultural products/by‐products
Author(s) -
Li Yuanyuan,
Tewolde Haile,
Miles Dana,
Munyon Jay,
Brooks John P.,
Feng Gary,
Zhang Fengbao,
Yang Mingyi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of environmental quality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.888
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1537-2537
pISSN - 0047-2425
DOI - 10.1002/jeq2.20189
Subject(s) - poultry litter , chemistry , biochar , decomposition , manure , incubation , organic matter , environmental chemistry , soil water , crop residue , agronomy , zoology , environmental science , pyrolysis , nutrient , soil science , agriculture , ecology , biology , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Increasing soil organic matter (SOM) is one purpose of applying manures to soils, but soil‐applied manures decompose and disappear in a short time, leaving very little trace as SOM. The objective of this study was to test and identify agricultural and industrial products and by‐products (PBPs) that reduce the speed of manure decomposition and, potentially, increase SOM. Raw poultry litter (PL) was amended with selected PBPs (15% fresh weight) and incubated for 1–3 mo. Unamended PL lost an average of 19% of its dry weight after 1 mo incubation and 24% of its dry weight after 3 mo. Monitoring the CO 2 release during a 1‐mo incubation revealed that decomposition and weight loss of unamended PL is greatest in the first 2 d. Amending PL with Al 2 (SO 4 ) 3 · 18H 2 O and CaO reduced cumulative CO 2 release and final dry biomass loss during the incubation period of 1–3 mo. Amending PL with Al 2 (SO 4 ) 3 · 18H 2 O reduced PL temperature by up to 14 °C and pH by ∼4.0, whereas CaO elevated its temperature by up to 24 °C and pH by ∼4.0. Both products suppressed total culturable bacteria and reduced dehydrogenase activity soon after mixing. Amending PL with flue gas desulfurization gypsum, CaCO 3 , cement kiln dust, or biochar either enhanced or had no effect on suppressing litter decomposition. Our results overall show that the decomposition of PL and possibly other manures may be slowed and that the soil‐residence life of manure C may be increased using PBPs that raise or lower manure pH and temperature.