JOURNAL ARTICLE

Effects of cattle slurry manure management on grass yield

R.L.M. SchilsI. B. Kok

Year: 2003 Journal:   NJAS - Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences Vol: 51 (1-2)Pages: 41-65   Publisher: Elsevier BV

Abstract

The effects of application method, cattle slurry manure type and use of additives on grassland performance were studied in a 3-year field experiment on two farms on sandy soils in the northern part of the Netherlands. The objectives were to determine the effects on (1) nitrogen (N) utilization, (2) soil organic matter and soil N content, and (3) botanical composition of the sward. Cattle slurry manure from the two dairy farms was compared. Farm Harkema represented conventional management, while farm Drogeham used the additive Euromestmix® and reduced the N content of the dairy cow rations. In additional treatments, the slurry manure types were combined with the additives Effective Microbes® (EM) or FIR-naturel®. In all slurry manure type ¿ additive combinations the slurry manure was either surface-applied or slit-injected. The resulting 12 treatments were applied without or with additional inorganic fertilizer N (165 kg ha¿¹). The annual apparent N recovery (ANR) of N fertilizer was 0.79 kg kg⊃¿1;. The ANR of surface-applied slurry manure (0.30 kg kg-1;) was consistently lower than that of slitinjected manure (0.44 kg kg¿1), a difference that could be fully attributed to the manure applications during the growing season. No effect of application method was observed at the first application in March. Slurry manure type and additive use had no consistent effects on grass yield or N utilization. Statistically significant effects were only observed occasionally, mostly in interaction with other experimental factors. During the three experimental years, the changes in soil organic matter and soil N content were small. Application method had no effect on the measured soil characteristics. Slurry manure type and additive use had a small statistically significant effect at one site only. However, longer-term monitoring is necessary to draw firm conclusions. Application method, slurry manure type or additive use did not affect the botanical composition of the sward.

Keywords:
Manure Slurry Agronomy Environmental science Fertilizer Manure management Nitrogen Animal science Composition (language) Organic matter Soil water Chemistry Biology Environmental engineering Soil science Ecology

Metrics

46
Cited By
3.39
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
18
Refs
0.91
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Soil Science
Ruminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Agronomy and Crop Science
Soil and Water Nutrient Dynamics
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Chemistry

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

On-farm impact of cattle slurry manure management on biological soil quality

R.G.M. de GoedeL. BrussaardA.D.L. Akkermans

Journal:   NJAS - Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences Year: 2003 Vol: 51 (1-2)Pages: 103-133
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Effects of different treatments of cattle slurry manure on water-extractable phosphorus

Lydie Chapuis‐LardyE.J.M. TemminghoffR.G.M. de Goede

Journal:   NJAS - Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences Year: 2003 Vol: 51 (1-2)Pages: 91-102
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Cattle manure fertilization increases fig yield

Sarita LeonelMarco Antônio Tecchio

Journal:   Scientia Agricola Year: 2009 Vol: 66 (6)Pages: 806-811
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Temperature Effect on Rheological Properties of Cattle Manure Slurry

Yie-Ruey ChenEL Shetler

Journal:   Journal of Testing and Evaluation Year: 1983 Vol: 11 (6)Pages: 360-364
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.