Study
Shows More Corn for Biofuels Will Hurt Water Supplies
WEST
LAFAYETTE, Ind. - More of the fertilizers and pesticides used to
grow corn would find their way into nearby water sources if ethanol
demands lead to planting more acres in corn, according to a Purdue
University study.
The
study of Indiana water sources found that those near fields that
practice continuous-corn rotations had higher levels of nitrogen,
fungicides and phosphorous than corn-soybean rotations. Results
of the study by Indrajeet Chaubey, an associate professor of agricultural
and biological engineering, and Bernard Engel, a professor and head
of agricultural and biological engineering, were published in the
early online version of The Journal of Environmental Engineering.
"When
you move from corn-soybean rotations to continuous corn, the sediment
losses will be much greater," Chaubey said. "Increased
sediment losses allow more fungicide and phosphorous to get into
the water because they move with sediment."
Nitrogen
and fungicides are more heavily used in corn crops than soybeans,
increasing the amounts found in the soil of continuous-corn fields.
Sediment losses become more prevalent because tilling is often required
in continuous-corn fields, whereas corn-soybean rotations can more
easily be no-till fields, Engel said.
"The
common practice is there is a lot of tillage to put corn back on
top of corn," Engel said. "Any time we see changes in
the landscape, there is a potential to see changes in water quality."
Chaubey
said there was no significant change in the amount of atrazine detected
in water near fields that changed to continuous-corn rotations.
The commonly used pesticide sticks to plant material and degrades
in sunlight, keeping it from reaching water through runoff or sediment.
U.S.
Department of Agriculture data has shown that corn acreage has increased
with the demand for ethanol, with 93 million acres in 2007, an increase
of 12.1 million acres that year.
"As
we look forward here, if corn stover is going to be a preferred
bio-feedstock, we would see more corn acreage being planted,"
Engel said. "We need to know how that will affect water quality."
The
USDA and Purdue funded the study. Chaubey and Engel are expanding
their research to Iowa, Tennessee and Arkansas. That three-year
study will include impacts of various biofeedstock, such as switch
grass, and developing management practices to reduce sediment, nutrient
and pesticide losses.
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