

Research to Pasteurize
Manure Featured at Chesapeake Bay DayBy Don Comis September 22, 1999BELTSVILLE, Md., Sept. 22--Agricultural Research Service administrator
Floyd P. Horn announced today the start of an experiment to see if
pasteurization is an effective means of killing E. coli, Cryptosporidium
parvum and other pathogens possibly lurking in cow manure, to make sure it
can be used safely to improve soils. "N-Viro, International, of Toledo,
Ohio, has loaned the U.S. Department of
Agriculture patented equipment used to pasteurize biosolids--the solids
remaining after wastewater treatment," Horn said. "The equipment
turns the sludge into 'N-Viro Soil,' a product that meets the strictest federal
standards for safe biosolids." Horn said N-Viro moved the equipment--a vertical and horizontal silo with a
manure hopper and mixing bins in between--to a composting facility at USDA's
Beltsville (Md.) Agricultural Research
Center. He said the equipment mixes recycled materials like cement or lime
kiln dust, coal ash from electric power plants, and gypsum with manure. A
natural chemical reaction occurs when the lime or other high-calcium material
hits the manure, creating heat, ammonia and high pH that kill pathogens. The equipment can be seen on a tour of the composting facility as part of
the first Beltsville Chesapeake Bay Day activities on Sept. 28 at the research
center, operated by ARS, USDA's chief scientific agency. Horn said Patricia D. Millner, research leader of the
Soil Microbial Systems
Laboratory in Beltsville, has begun experiments to compare pasteurization
with composting. Millner said she will assess each system for its ability to
kill pathogens and control odor. She will also test a hybrid system that
combines quicker composting with the pasteurization technique. Millner said she wants to see if the pasteurization process will also
convert phosphorus in manure to a form less likely to leach into streams and
rivers. "We will also test the addition of materials such as alum residue
from wastewater treatment plants for their ability to stabilize phosphorus in
manure," she said. Horn said if the experiment works it could help areas such as the Chesapeake
Bay both by preventing the escape of pathogens and phosphorus and by providing
a safe outlet for two materials found in excess in Chesapeake Bay coastal
areas: high-phosphorus chicken litter and harbor dredging spoils. "We will try pasteurizing chicken manure in a mixture of dredging
spoils to convert the spoils into a substitute soil for reclamation of road
cuts, strip mines and other degraded soil sites that need topsoil for plant
growth," he said. A complete agenda and free online registration for the Beltsville Chesapeake
Bay Day is on the World Wide Web at: http://www.ba.ars.usda.gov/bayday.htm Scientific contact: Patricia D. Millner,
Soil Microbial Systems
Laboratory, ARS Beltsville Agricultural
Research Center, Beltsville, Md., phone (301) 504-8163, fax (301) 504-8370,
[email protected]. U.S. Department of Agriculture | |