Nutrient use efficiency of intensive dairy farms in China – Current situation and analyses of options for improvement

Meixiu Tan, Yong Hou*, Ling Zhang, Shengli Shi, Weitong Long, Yifei Ma, Tao Zhang, Oene Oenema

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

CONTEXT: Global dairy production contributes a relatively large share of the total emissions of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) to air and water bodies, which are a concern. However, there are large differences among dairy farming systems in performance, and these differences are not well understood. This relates especially to emerging market economies such as China, where dairy production is increasing, and where new dairy farms are relatively large, intensive, and on small areas of farmland. OBJECTIVES: This study estimated the N and P flows and use efficiencies (NUE and PUE) of 141 dairy farms at the farm, herd, and manure management levels. Emission mitigation technologies were also explored to identify the effects of improving farm nutrient use efficiencies on each farm via scenario analyses. METHODS: We collected data from farm surveys and feed sample analyses. Based on the empirical management data, a nutrient flow model was developed and used for the quantification of nutrient flows. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: We found substantial variation among the farms in NUE (53 ± 20%) and PUE (84 ± 22%) at the farm level, but not at the herd level. Our estimates of NUE and PUE were much higher, and N and P losses were much lower, than previous estimates. The effects of management technologies varied greatly among farms; increases in farm-level NUE ranged from 0 to 53% and in PUE from 0 to 79%. Improving manure storage and treatment technologies and increasing manure export had relatively large effects on farm-level NUE and PUE and nutrient losses, while the effects of low-protein feeding were limited. SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings highlight the need for farm-specific technologies targeted to specific aspects of the whole manure management chain to improve the NUE and PUE of the industrial dairy production sector in China. Furthermore, manure application limits are needed to prevent excessive manure applications and nutrient losses from croplands.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103495
JournalAgricultural Systems
Volume203
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Abatement technologies
  • Ammonia emissions
  • Manure management
  • Nitrogen
  • Phosphorus
  • Uncertainty analysis

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