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PEI

Research project in P.E.I. potato field confirms the oldtimers were right about manure

It may sound like a no-brainer to Islanders who grew up raising cows and growing potatoes. But new research from Agriculture Canada shows adding a small amount of manure to cover crops can give spuds later planted in the same field a big boost.

Combination of manure and cover crops boosted production by 26% in test field

A woman holds a bag of soil in a potato field
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada research scientist Judith Nyiraneza collects soil samples from one of her research fields in Harrington, P.E.I. (Rick Gibbs/CBC)

A research scientist on Prince Edward Island has confirmed what many Island farmers knew decades ago when it was common to raisecattle and growpotatoes on the same farm: Manure is good for spuds.

So good, in fact, that a recent studyshowed a small amount of manure added to cover crops grown before potatoes were planted in a field increased marketable yields by 26 per cent.

Judith Nyiraneza, the study's author and a Charlottetown-based research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, said manure has long been known to regenerate soil and boost cover crops.

"So far, we have seen very interesting results around manure application," Nyiraneza said.

"When we apply a very low amount ... we were able to see that manure boosted yield by 26 per cent, but it did also increase the soil nitrogen supply capacity by 44 per cent."

Nyiranezasaid the numbers are impressive for such a smallamount of manure, around 20 metric tonnes, and she is now looking at how a wider use of the treatment could benefit the environment.

"It would be an excellent soil regenerative management practiceif we can see that it does also reduce greenhouse gas, and does increase the carbon sequestration," she said.

Nyiranezasaid there's been interest from potato growers in partnering with local cattle farms to source the manure, while alsoproviding grazing land for the cows.

"There isa win-win situation where their farm is getting feed for free and the potato growers are also having manure on their land without needing to transport it."

A woman crouches in a potato field with a white canister
Researchers from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada are also testing the manure-cover crops combination to see what they do when it comes to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and carbon sequestration. (Nancy Russell/CBC)

She'sworking with three potato growers in a combined potato-livestock project throughLiving Lab P.E.I.

"I think we are realizing thatyou cannot push the soil to produce more and more," she said. "Eventually you have to go backand try to regenerate it if you want to sustain the yield for your future generation."

Nyiranezahopes to have some "interesting results" to share next year, comparing carbon sequestration between 2017 and 2024.

'Fertilizer plant'

At least one P.E.I. potato farmer has already made the move back to a combination of cattle and potatoes.

Stephen Visser and his wife purchased a feedlot late last year in Orwell Cove leading one person they know to jokingly referto their cattle operation as their "fertilizer plant."

A man standing in a field with cows
Nyiraneza says many potato growers already know about the benefits of using manure. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Visser said they can feed culled potatos to the cattleand use the straw they grow for bedding, while the cattle provide a steady source of free manure.

"That was a pretty big deal for us because we really like the idea of putting manure back on the land," he said."Actually, the reason why we grew cover crops is because we felt cover crops were as close to manure as we could get."

Visser said it's been several decades since he used manure on his farm;they lost their source when they stopped raising pigs in the mid-1990s.

A man stands in front of a gate with a cow in the background
Stephen Visser stands in front of cattle operation that he and his wife purchased late last year, in Orwell Cove, P.E.I. (Nancy Russell/CBC)

"Manure is hard to get. Alot of people that generate their own manure use their own manure; they don't generally sell it too much. We generally use cover crops as green manure, basically because we couldn't get manure," he said.

"There's fewerlivestock operations than there used to be to pull manure from, so that's going to be a challenge.

"I think there's going to be a shortage if demand goes up. There won't be really enough to go around."

Livestock strategy

The P.E.I. government has tried to raise awareness around soil health, includingthrough a2021 campaign.The Department of Agriculture developed a livestock strategy to rebuild soil health through the production of more manure.

"It takes a long time to deplete soil organic matter, and it takes a long time to build it back up,"said P.E.I. Agriculture Minister Bloyce Thompson.

"Probably one of the reasons is because... our livestock on this Island was depleted after BSE in the early 2000s, and we haven't built the herd up."

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, also known as BSE or mad cow disease, is an incurable and often fatal disease affecting cattle. The detection of a case in an Alberta cow in 2003 led other countries to ban imports of Canadian beef, leading to a major contraction in the industry.

"We're really missing that manureand the cattle part of our ecosystemfor building the soil up," Thompson said.

Two cows in a barn
One person refers to Stephen Visser's feed lot as his "fertilizer plant". (Rick Gibbs/CBC)

Visser is optimistic that adding the cattle operation will pay off with healthier soil and greater potato yields.He is impressed with the results from the Agriculture Canada study.

"That's amazing. I think that's great. If that's really true, if we can prove that [on] our farm here, that would be very, very helpful here," he said.

"This will be the first year that we've done it, and we're really hoping to see good results in a good sorghum crop, and then in the long term in a better potato crop."

Visser said the manure will also serve another important purpose preparing his farm for climate change impacts including drought and heavy rainfall.

"Climate change, it really affects us," he said."We may not see it from year over year, but over the long term it affects us and our crops and yeah, it's a big deal for us."