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Best Management Practices Information provided by Brian Boman (Agriculture and Horticulture) Laurie Trenholm (Urban Turfgrass) Amy Shober (Urban Landscapes)

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Presentation on theme: "Best Management Practices Information provided by Brian Boman (Agriculture and Horticulture) Laurie Trenholm (Urban Turfgrass) Amy Shober (Urban Landscapes)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Best Management Practices Information provided by Brian Boman (Agriculture and Horticulture) Laurie Trenholm (Urban Turfgrass) Amy Shober (Urban Landscapes) Esen Momol (Florida-Friendly Landscapes) Pierce Jones (Low-Impact Development) Thomas Obreza

2 Historical perspective BMP program concept accelerated with passage of the Florida Watershed Restoration Act in 1999. FDEP became the lead agency in charge of establishing TMDLs. 10 years later, BMPs have become “quasi-regulatory” in watersheds with a Basin Management Action Plan.

3 Tri-County Ag Area: First ag area to have a BMAP established Producers must enroll in FDACS BMP programs or monitor quality of water leaving their property. Assessments on 9,519 acres show producers are using 94% of applicable BMPs… …but not some key ones.

4 Lead Agency: Department of Environmental Protection coordinates efforts with Department of Agriculture Office of Ag Water Policy Water Management Districts Plus…Soil and Water Conservation Districts, Environmental groups, Local govt., etc. Leadership role for agriculture

5 Green industries Golf courses Cow/calf Sod Silviculture Vegetables and Row Crops Nursery and Ferns Citrus FDEP FDACSFDACS

6 IFAS involvement in BMP research, extension, and education Agricultural Urban

7 2008 survey assessing IFAS BMP programs (79 state and 63 county faculty responded) BMP areasNo. faculty programs Production agriculture, horticulture, livestock, and forestry (266) Vegetables47 Nursery/Trees/Greenhouse39 Agronomic row crops37 Cow/calf, forages, hay33 Turfgrass (golf, sod, sports)29 Citrus25 Deciduous/Tropical fruits20 Silviculture14 Equine11 Dairy and poultry11 Urban (83) Landscapes (lawns/ornamentals)52 Florida-friendly landscapes/FYN31 General areas (non- commodity (108) Soil/plant/water/nutrients58 EAA/Lake Okeechobee17 Organic production16 Modeling11 Socio-economic6

8 Typical BMP manual development --- IFAS involvement State agencies identify the need. Form steering committee/technical work groups. State agencies. UF-IFAS. Producers. Environmental groups. Allied industry. Produce draft manual; peer-review and revise. Public workshops. Adopt manual in code. Distribute manual. BMP education. IFAS

9 Mace Bauer Row crops, vegetables Jemy Hinton Vegetables, strawberry, nursery Darren Cole Citrus, nursery Gio Stinghen Citrus Richard Repperger Nursery, sod Kevin Hancock Citrus, vegetables, nursery Stuart Swanson Vegetables, sod UF-IFAS BMP Implementation Team led by Dr. Brian Boman

10 Agriculture / Horticulture BMP implementation

11 Madison Co.Columbia Co.Jefferson Co.Gilchrist Co. Suwannee Co. Madison Co. Gilchrist Co. Starling Farm Terry Farm Langford Farm 83 Farms Walker Farm Spradley FarmLee Peanut/Birdsong BMP implementation in North Florida N fertilizer use efficiency has improved due to: Confidence in IFAS fertilizer recommendations. Precision application equipment. Better irrigation scheduling.

12 120-acre demo pivot Grower reduced N from 325 lbs/ac to 230 or 290 lbs/ac. Highest returns from 230 lbs/ac. Grower plans reductions on other crops based on this experience. Example: Corn demo

13 Central/South Florida BMP implementation: Citrus Accurate irrigation scheduling Precision fertilizer application Precision spraying Sediment control Educating grove workers

14 Example: Variable rate fertilization 222 acre test citrus grove. Side-by-side conventional vs. variable-rate application. Conventional: 48 tons/appl. VRT: 37 tons/appl. 23% savings in applied fertilizer. One 20-ton fertilizer load saved every 150 acres fertilized. (Company owns 12,000 acres.)

15 Central/South Florida BMP implementation: Nursery Saving water and fertilizer, and reducing nutrient leaching. Conversion from overhead to drip irrigation Covered storage/mix/load facility Cistern collects water from roof for irrigation Weather station Irrigation based on solar radiation and temperature

16 Example: Carroll Brothers Nursery compared drip, overhead and capillary mat irrigation Drip and overhead irrigation were uneven due to inconsistent pressure. With capillary mat irrigation: Crops received uniform watering. No leaching or off-site water/nutrient discharge. Fertilizer use decreased 50%.

17 Bob Carroll : “Production-wise, I can move the crop out six to eight weeks faster. And I water three times a day on the Aquamats, 2 minutes at a time, and save 90% of my water. I don’t have to spray as often. There’s no overhead water. Everything is wicking up from the bottom, and makes life a little easier. It’s a different way of growing, but it works good; you save water.”

18 FDACS BMP Programs: Enrolled Acres

19 Urban landscape BMP education, implementation, and research

20 19972007 Population1,037,0001,275,000 (+23%) Tons of fertilizer sold Farm use30,00019,000 Non-farm use10,00019,000 Population556,000687,000 (+24%) Tons of fertilizer sold Farm use62,00053,000 Non-farm use 8,00014,000 Population406,000532,000 (+31%) Tons of fertilizer sold Farm use122,00063,000 Non-farm use 8,00025,000 Population757,0001,059,000 (+40%) Tons of fertilizer sold Farm use104,00078,000 Non-farm use 12,00030,000 As population has increased, so has the percentage of fertilizer sold for non-farm use. Nassau, Duval, Clay, St. Johns Manatee, Sarasota Indian River, Martin, St. Lucie Charlotte, Lee, Collier

21 Laurie Trenholm has conducted urban BMP training in these counties:

22 20042005200620072008 No. of people trained530340 8841652 Pre/post test score improvement (%) 15141324 16 Eng. 27 Span. Proportion of audience who would recommend BMPs to clients and employees (%) 7265737972 Urban BMP training outcomes

23 Urban BMP training shift in 2009 Emphasis of program is to get all county horticultural agents certified as trainers. Currently have BMP-certified trainers in approximately 30 counties. Will have up to 50 counties by July.

24 Trenholm–Unruh–Cisar team is researching nutrient leaching from lawns. Lysimeter catches nitrate that passes through root zone.

25 “Fate of fertilizer N” projects are looking at N leaching… …during sod establishment. …in established turf. …during the winter. …due to N source. …due to mowing height. …due to clipping management.

26 Nutrient leaching research Currently beginning the 5 th year. Mature St. Augustinegrass has been very efficient at taking up N – In general, less than 5% of the N applied has been measured in the leachate.

27 Landscape BMP research at GCREC-Balm

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29 Example: Low-impact development Lakewood Ranch neighborhoods have incorporated Florida-friendly landscaping principles. IFAS faculty use science-based principles to educate county commissioners and other officials about low-impact development.

30 Challenges we face Diverse BMP programs compete for science-based information. BMPs  Quasi-regulatory  True regulatory. Education and training needs. Competing needs of stakeholders.


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