Nitrogen and phosphorus management on pig farms in Northwest Germany – nutrient balances and challenges for better sustainability

Authors

  • D. Otten
  • H. F. A. Van den Weghe

Keywords:

Nutrient management, intensive pig production, Northwest Germany

Abstract

The study analyses the nutrient flow of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) on six intensive pig farms in
Northwest Germany over a period of 5 years. The study investigated the farmers’ management of
nutrient flows associated with intensive pig farming, focusing especially on the management of
manure. It could be shown that in intensive pig production, high performance and performance-related
feeding positively affects nutrient flow efficiency. However, on the crop production side of the farms,
there existed a great disharmony between the farmers’ perception of manure used as (N, P) fertiliser on
their crops and the real quantity of nutrients produced by their intensive pig farming. The farmers were
unable to estimate the fertiliser effect of their manure correctly [underestimation N = 7.6% (10.6 kg/ha),
P = 33.6% (11.6 kg/ha)]. The application of nutrients by mineral fertiliser was underestimated also [N by
4.1% (8.1 kg/ha), P by 12.7% (1.5 kg/ha)] and were inadequately attuned to the large amount of manure
produced by their intensive pig production. As a result, the farms had large nutrient losses (104.5 kg N/
ha; 11.7 kg P/ha) and were unable to fulfil the minimum German legal requirements for fertiliser
application. The study evaluated the critical aspects of nutrient management and discusses possible
improvements for the future.

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Published

2013-10-26

How to Cite

D. Otten, & H. F. A. Van den Weghe. (2013). Nitrogen and phosphorus management on pig farms in Northwest Germany – nutrient balances and challenges for better sustainability. African Journal of Pig Farming, 1(1), 1–10. Retrieved from https://elixirpublishers.in/index.php/ajpf/article/view/611