SARE Provides Grants and Information to Improve Profitability, Stewardship and Quality of Life | |||||||||||||||||
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Creeks,
Streams Benefit from Careful Farming Practices
A group of researchers, farmers, extension educators and high school
students, interested in how farming operations affect water quality in
their southern Georgia community, joined a SARE-funded project to assess
nutrient levels in streams throughout their watershed. Jean Steiner, a
researcher from the USDA Agricultural Research Service, led a wide-ranging
water quality sampling project that included 15 farmers to determine practices
that minimize the flow of nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen into
streams and creeks. The group received training in how to take accurate
water quality samples and installed monitoring devices at 20 locations.
Where the job seemed too onerous for working farmers, groups of high schoolers
assisted as part of FFA and 4-H projects. An FFA chapter and a science
club chipped in with "adopt-a-stream" projects. Some results,
such as finding clear water when farmers retained vegetative buffers at
field edges to catch nutrients, were expected. Others were a bit more
unusual. A farmer found that fecal coliform bacteria from cattle manure
settled out in his pond before reaching a stream; a dairy farmer who spread
slurry from his manure lagoon onto a silage field learned that an adjacent
hayfield served as an effective riparian buffer. Another SARE water quality
project, run by the ARS National Sedimentation Laboratory in Mississippi,
showed that vegetative barriers reduce sediment leaving fields by 75 percent.
In September 2000, the USDA NRCS placed a national practice standard for
the use of grass hedges such as switchgrassinto the congressional
record. Meanwhile, the Georgia project team shared its information as
"best management practices" to agricultural educators, partly
in a workbook about managing nutrients in farm watersheds. In all, the
project helped confirm that creeks and streams benefited from careful
farming practices. Water flowing through the watershed, dotted with farms,
actually improved.
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