Treating Nitrates | NRCS Iowa
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Treating Nitrates

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Treating Nitrates

Over-Applying Farm Chemicals Can Lead to Water Quality Issues
The Gulf of Mexico's "Dead Zone" is largely attributed to agricultural runoff from the Midwest. Agriculture has been similarly targeted closer to home, where amounts of nitrogen in Iowa's drinking water supplies have increased dramatically throughout the past century. For example, in a 2000 U.S. Geological Survey study, average annual nitrate concentrations in the Des Moines and Cedar Rivers have increased nearly seven times over the last 100 years, from about 0.6 milligrams per liter to as much as 4.6 mg/l. And data provided by Des Moines Water Works dating back to the 1930s shows nitrate levels in the Raccoon River stayed consistently below 1 mg/l until the mid 1960s. Since then, nitrate levels have increased to as high as 10.2 mg/l in 2002. Over the last 20 years, average nitrate levels in the Raccoon River average 7.3 mg/l.

What Can Be Done

  • Reduce inputs. The best way to prevent nitrates and other chemicals from leaving crop fields, either through runoff or leaching into groundwater, is to simply reduce the amount of fertilizer and pesticides that are applied.
  • Improve soil health. Healthy soils have deeper topsoil layers which are high in organic matter. This organic matter layer allows soils to hold water and nutrients like a sponge until plants need them. Ways to improve soil health include reducing or eliminate soil disturbing activities, such as tillage, and adding diversity to a crop rotation, with practices like cover crops.
  • Implement a Drainage Water Management (DWM) system. DWM systems allow farmers to manage drainage tile water levels with a water control structure, much like those used to control wetland water levels. Water level structures are simply retrofit to an existing tile system.

Additional Resources

Articles
  • Reduce Nitrate Loss On Your Farm (Successful Farming, Nov. 25, 2019)
  • Nutrient Pollution in the Mississippi River Watershed: A Mississippi River Basin Initiative Story Map
  • Wood Chip Bioreactors: Science, Not Magic (Wallaces Farmer, June 2016)
  • Buffer Strips Key to Reducing Nitrates in Water (The Des Moines Register, April 2015)
  • Success Stories in Sustainable Agriculture: Saturated Buffers (PDF)
  • Saturated Buffers A New Tool to Improve Water Quality, Dirck Steimel, Iowa Farm Bureau
  • Farmers Try Controlled Drainage to Keep Water, Nutrients in Place (Corn & Soybean Digest, May 2015)
  • Cover Crops Treat Residual N from Drought
  • Drainage Water Management Good for Tile Drainage
Brochures
  • Saturated Buffer Publication
  • Cleaning Iowa's Waters with Saturated Buffers - ISU, WQ0005 (PDF)
  • Conservation Choices: Soil Health Practices (PDF, 5 MB)
  • Conservation Choices: Water Quality Practices (PDF, 5 MB)
  • Conservation Drainage: Iowa Soybean Association (5 MB, PDF)
  • Cover Crops: A Guide for Iowa Producers (PDF)
  • Drainage Water Management (PDF)
  • Drainage Water Management for the Midwest (PDF)
  • Saturated Buffer Fact Sheet (PDF)
  • Wetland Mitigation and Drainage Districts: Landowner's Rights and Responsibilities (PDF)
Conservation Practice Standards
  • CP27 - Farmable Wetlands Wetland (Courtesy of Michigan NRCS)
  • CP28 - Farmable Wetlands Buffer (Courtesy of Michigan NRCS)
  • CP39 - Farmable Wetlands Constructed Wetland (Courtesy of Michigan NRCS)
  • CP40 - Farmable Wetlands Aquaculture Wetland Restoration (Courtesy of Michigan NRCS)
  • Cover Crops 340 (PDF)
  • Drainage Water Management 554 (PDF)
  • Denitrifying Bioreactor 605 (PDF)
  • Saturated Buffers 604 (PDF)
Job Sheets
  • Cover Crops (PDF)
  • Drainage Water Management (PDF)
Presentations
  • Saturating Riparian Buffers in Tile Drained Landscapes for Nitrate Removal, Dan Jaynes, USDA-ARS & Tom Isenhart, Iowa State University (PDF)
Videos
  • Drainage Water Management - NRCS
  • Drainage Water Management - WHO-TV Agribusiness Report (3/20/12)
  • Nabbing Nitrates: Before Water Leaves the Farm (YouTube)
    • Conservation Drainage
    • Riparian Forest Buffers
    • Working Wetlands
    • Denitrifying Bioreactors
Websites/Conservation Programs
  • Artificial N Sinks (Constructed Wetlands & Denitrifying Bioreactors)
  • Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP)
    • Iowa Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (Iowa CREP)
  • Farm Service Agency Programs
  • Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watersheds Initiative (MRBI)
  • Iowa NRCS Nutrient Management

Contact:
Christian Osborn, State Engineer
Phone: 515-284-4135

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