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2016 Logan County Fall Farm Outlook Magazine

Lincoln Daily News

Oct. 27, 2016

41

In response to the United States Environmental

Protection Agency’s

Clean Water Act

, states were

asked to set their own standards to help reduce

nutrient loads and sediment entering streams. The

contaminants affect drinking water supplies, are costly

to remove, create health risks and environmental

damages.

Agriculture is identified as contributing 80 percent of

the Nitrogen and Nitrates (N) and 48 percent of the

Phosphorous (P) contaminating streams through runoff

and leached nutrients to tile drainage, as well as

contributing to soil loss by erosion, all of which have

led to hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico.

The new Illinois Nutrient Loss Reduction Strategy

may seem like another government impingement

on the farmer, and it is really. But, working with

ag industry leaders and a host of other experts, the

program targets graduated measures by voluntary

compliance aiming for 45 percent reduction of both N

and P by 2050, with a 2025 early assessment.

These goals may seem lofty and a burden, but consider

that farmers are already striving to be good land

stewards while making a profit, and as it appears

from recent field research, both goals are compatible,

particularly in the use of N.

No one goes to the gas station and over fills their tank

time and again. That would be wasteful, costly, and

environmentally unsound.

Everyone knows, corn eats nitrogen, more than any

other grain crop; both the plant while it is in growth

stage and the grain while in development. The

nitrogen to yield ratio on established fields shows

adding more N gets higher yields.

But when is adding N eating profit potentials?

Nitrogen rates for corn

A bushel of corn contains about 0.8 pounds of N.

A 200-bushel corn crop removes about 160 pounds N

from the field.

Is the Illinois Nutrient Reduction

Strategy counter intuitive profits?

By

Jan Youngquist

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