-------------1999 Weekly News Notes-------------
December 27, 1999. Since August 1996, Hank Mayland and
cooperators have tested and shown that afternoon-harvested forage
contained higher concentrations of soluble sugars than morning-
harvested hay, that ruminants preferred the afternoon-harvested hay, and
that they would eat more of it. An update of these results was presented
at the December 1999 California/Nevada Alfalfa Growers meeting and a
mini-questionnaire distributed asking about their familiarity and adoption
of afternoon harvesting strategies. A summary of 50 alfalfa grower
respondents (representing 80,000 Acres) from California and five other
states indicated that 94% were aware of afternoon harvest benefits to
forage quality, 58% had cut during PM in 1999, and 80% were planning to
cut during PM in 2000. This represented 58% of acreage in 1999 and 86% in
2000. (KIM19991229N1)
December 27, 1999. Dwight Gilbert of Powell, Wyoming, is one of a
dozen seed growers inquiring of Hank Mayland about HiMag tall
fescue. They became aware of this new grass through the Kiplinger
Agricultural Newsletter. (KIM19991229N2)
December 17, 1999. 'Forage to Make Taste Buds Tingle' article
prepared by Marcia Wood, ARS-IS, appeared in Dairy World, Nov.-
Dec. 1999, p 15. It discusses plant cues used by ruminants and the
benefits of afternoon harvesting of forage for optimum feed value.
This release was prepared following a series of exchanges with Hank
Mayland. (KIM19991222N1)
December 6-9, 1999. Rick Lentz and Dave Bjorneberg attended the
U.S.-China Bilateral Workshop on Sediment Management in
Agricultural Watersheds at Oxford, Mississippi. Approximately 40
people attended the workshop including 10 Chinese scientists. The
workshop included presentations about erosion and sedimentation
problems and research in both the United States and China and
current status of erosion models for agricultural watersheds. Dr.
Lentz co-chaired a workshop session and made a presentation
entitled "Polymer charge and molecular weight effects on treated
irrigation furrow processes." Dr. Bjorneberg gave a presentation
entitled "Unique aspects of modeling irrigation-induced soil erosion."
Papers written for this meeting will be published in a special issue of
the International Journal of Sediment Research. Participants also toured
the National Sedimentation Lab and visited erosion control and channel
stabilization research sites. The Chinese delegation was very interested
in establishing contacts for future research collaboration. (KIM19991216N1)
November 30-December 4, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in the
ARS team writing the NP-205 action plan for ‘Rangelands, Pastures,
and Forages.’ While there, he attended the seminar of Dr. Evert
Byington, candidate for National Program Staff, NP-205. He also
visited with Drs. Alan Lefcourt, Laura McConnell, and Jim Reeves
about measurement of volatiles and midrange infra-red scanning
spectroscopy. (KIM19991209N1)
December 7, 1999. Jim Wright and Gary Lehrsch met with
representatives of the Idaho potato processing industry, State of
Idaho Division of Environmental Quality (DEQ), State of Washington
Department of Ecology, University of Idaho, Washington State
University, and environmental consultants. The purpose of the
meeting was to discuss principles of land application of wastewater
and to review recent research on applying wastewater to land during
the non-growing season. In the meeting, Gary and Jim noted
difficulties often encountered when measuring water flow and nutrient
transport within and below crop root zones. Additional meetings between
ARS scientists and meeting attendees will be held to identify appropriate
methods to measure and characterize water and nutrient movement beneath
land application sites throughout Idaho and in surrounding states.
Computer models of cropping systems, nutrient management, and/or waste
disposal will likely be used to extend field research findings to
locations not yet studied in detail. (KIM19991209N2)
December 8, 1999. The ARS-NWISRL Scientists met with Ron
Jones, Magic Valley Farmer/Banker and Louis Licht, Ecolotree, Inc.,
Iowa, to discuss Dr. Licht's experiences using poplar tree for
phytoremediation of landfills and other hazardous waste sites. Dr.
Licht indicated that the function of using poplar trees for this purpose
is in many cases much more important than the product being produced.
Irrigated agriculture, Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) and
processing plants have circumstances where this technology if properly
applied could avoid potential future environmental problems.
(KIM19991209N3)
November 22, 1999. Hank Mayland hosted Dr. Suguru Saiga for the
last month. Suguru is professor of grassland science at the
University of Iwate located in Morioka, Japan. This nine week
sabbatical, included four weeks in England and one week in
Portland/Corvallis, Oregon. His research involves mineral uptake by
forage plants and their impact on grass tetany of grazing animals.
The visit may result in a cooperative project to use EDX and SEM
instrumentation to track K, Mg, and Ca movement from roots to tops
of high- and low-Mg absorbing perennial ryegrass, tall festuca, and
orchardgrass. Results should provide insight into the interaction of K
and Mg transport from grass roots to tops. (KIM19991124N1)
November 22, 1999. Hank Mayland, after clearance from Sandra
Hays, ARS Information Services, was interviewed by Guy Gugliotta
of the Washington Post. He was following up on articles released by
ARS describing animal preference for PM-harvested vs AM-harvested
forage. The material will appear in the November 29 issue of the
Washington Post. (KIM19991124N2)
November 7-9, 1999. Bob Sojka attended the Irrigation Association's
fiftieth annual technical meeting and show. He presented two
papers: "Polyacrylamide (PAM) - A One Million Acre Progress
Report" and "Polyacrylamide Application to Soil Reduces the
Movement of Microorganisms in Water." On Wednesday Sojka was
one of several observers at the International Standards Organization
(ISO) committee meeting on irrigation, which was scheduled to take
advantage of the Irrigation Association's schedule and venue. The
ISO committee develops international standards for manufactured
goods used by the irrigation industry. (KIM19991118N1)
November 8-9, 1999. Dennis Flanagan met with Dennis Kincaid and
Dave Bjorneberg at the NWISRL to discuss evaluation work that has
been done and needs to be completed for irrigation components of
the water erosion prediction project (WEPP) model. Flanagan is the
WEPP project leader from the National Soil Erosion Lab in West
Lafayette, Indiana. Flanagan and Kincaid discussed sprinkler
irrigation erosion and how the model could be applied to center pivot
irrigation. It was concluded that for center pivots, the model in its
present form could only be used to evaluate small, critical or
representative slope sections within a field, but this may be sufficient
for most purposes. (KIM19991118N2)
Flanagan provided altered versions of the WEPP model so additional
parameters were output and hydraulic shear and transport capacity
could be input for furrow irrigation erosion evaluation. After running
some test simulations, Flanagan and Bjorneberg concluded that the
model could simulate furrow erosion once input parameters were
adjusted so runoff and soil detachment were accurately predicted
and transport capacity was decreased so deposition was predicted.
This means the fundamental relationships in the model should be
adequate, but the way parameters are calculated and adjusted needs
to be changed for furrow irrigation. However, specific changes cannot
be recommended until the model is more thoroughly evaluated on
other soil types. (KIM19991118N3)
November 10, 1999. Gary Lehrsch met with Dr. Neal Christensen,
Regional Agronomist with Farmland Industries, Lincoln, Nebraska,
and an accompanying visitor. Gary discussed with them the
potential for furrow irrigation management in combination with banded
N fertilizer placement to produce corn and protect groundwater in
both west-central and southern Idaho. After discussing N credits
from crops grown the previous year, Gary provided Neal with reprints
on related topics. (KIM19991118N4)
November 10, 1999. Dale Westermann met with 18 College of
Southern Idaho students enrolled in a beginning soils class taught by
Anne Poole. The students were presently analyzing soil samples in
their classroom lab. Different kinds of hand tools used to take soil
samples for nutrient and environmental analysis were demonstrated
in the field. All of the students had an opportunity to use each of the
tools, including a bucket-auger set up to sample to 16 feet.
(KIM19991118N5)
November 15, 1999. The 1999 Fall Dairy & Hay Grower's Guide
carried an article 'Scientists Sleuth Forage Secrets' (p. 9).
Information on grazing cues and animal preference for afternoon
harvested hay was picked up from ARS News Service. A second
article (p. 2) from the University of Idaho service, discussed
cooperative research supporting wider hay-windrow widths to
facilitate drying and retention of higher forage feed value. Both
articles highlight cooperative research among USDA-ARS scientists
Mayland, Fisher, and Burns and University of Idaho extension forage
specialist Glenn Shewmaker. (KIM19991118N6)
October 31, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in a day-long
Agricultural Ethics Workshop in Salt Lake City, Utah. The session
covered ethical theory and practical application. Cases were
developed and discussed relating to issues in the ag-sciences arena.
(KIM19991109N1)
November 1-4, 1999. Presentations by NWISRL personnel at the
91st Annual American Society of Agronomy Meetings in Salt Lake
City, Utah, included:
Jim Wright presented a poster paper entitled "Annual
evapotranspiration of irrigated lands in southern Idaho."
Gary Lehrsch presented a poster paper with co-authors Bob
Sojka and Dale Westermann entitled “Profile nitrate-N as
affected by irrigated-furrow positioning and N placement.”
Rick Lentz presented an oral paper with co-author Dave
Bjorneberg entitled “Water temperature effects on infiltration and
importance for furrow irrigation.”
Rick Lentz also presented a poster paper with co-author Dale
Westermann entitled “Phosphorus leaching from furrow-irrigated
calcareous soils.”
Dave Bjorneberg presented a poster paper with co-authors Dale
Westermann and Kris Aase entitled “Phosphorus dynamics in
furrow irrigation water.”
Hank Mayland and coauthors presented two poster papers titled
“Diurnal harvest timing and ruminant preference for switchgrass
hay” and “Carbohydrate accumulation rates in tall fescue.”
Kris Aase and co-authors Dave Bjorneberg and Dale
Westermann presented a poster paper titled “Straw-
polyacrylamide comparisons for control of runoff, erosion, and
phosphorus losses.
Jim Entry and co-authors R. K. Hubbard, J. E. Thies, and J. J.
Furhman presented a poster paper titled “Influence of vegetation
in riparian filterstrips on coliform bacteria: movement and survival
in surface flow and groundwater.”
Bob Sojka presented an oral paper with co-author Jim Entry
entitled “The influence of polyacrylamide application to soil on
movement of microorganisms in water.”
Bob Sojka also presented a poster paper with co-authors Dave
Bjorneberg and Kris Aase titled “The instantaneous wetting effect
on erosion from irrigated furrows.”
Dale Westermann and co-authors Dave Bjorneberg, Kris Aase
and Chuck Robbins presented a poster paper entitled “Soil P
effects on P losses during furrow irrigation.”
Dale Westermann also presented a poster paper with co-authors
C. Falen, J. C. Stark, and T. A. Tindall entitled “Dairy compost
effects on crop production and soil quality.” (KIM19991109N2)
November 5, 1999. Hank Mayland hosted Neal Martin, Director of
the U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center at Madison, Wisconsin.
Nine consumers met for 2-3 hours with Martin and Mayland to
discussion concerns about establishment, maintenance, harvest,
storage, testing, and utilization of alfalfa hay and silage from alfalfa
and corn forages. Participants included spokesmen for forage
producers, brokers, testers, consultants, and dairy men. Martin,
Mayland, and Saiga (Japanese grassland scientist) visited a dairy
facility under construction for 2,500 cows and then an operating dairy
of 1,000 head. They also visited the intense dairy area where 250,000
cows exist on Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO) of about
18,000 acres southwest of Jerome, Idaho. (KIM19991109N3)
October 15, 1999. Hank Mayland was interviewed by Linda
Robinson about PM-harvesting benefits to forage quality and animal
response. Linda was writing articles for 'Farm Times,' 'Progressive
Dairyman,' and 'Dairy and Hay Guide.' (KIM19991028N1)
October 21, 1999. Hank Mayland critiqued an article prepared by
Joe Funk, editor of 'Seed Today.' The article 'AM-PM Forage
Differences' discusses information gathered in a previous telephone
conversation and an article in 'Agricultural Research.' Seed Today is
read by seed industry people in North America. (KIM19991028N2)
Bob Sojka represented the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research
Laboratory (NWISRL) at the Global Change National Program
workshop held by the ARS in Denver, Colorado, October 4-7, 1999.
The NWISRL research related to global change was displayed in a
poster and handouts. The importance of cool climate arid zone
irrigation to potential carbon sequestration was emphasized as the
potential research focus of the Kimberly, Idaho, lab. Research to
capitalize on irrigation's ability to optimize the balance of yield,
profit,
carbon sequestration and greenhouse gas emission-reduction
through advanced irrigation scheduling and soil water management
was also noted. The need for research that accounts for inorganic
carbon cycling, important in irrigated systems, was also
emphasized. (KIM19991021N1)
October 7, 1999. ARS Agricultural Engineer Dave Bjorneberg and
University of Idaho Extension Specialists Glenn Shewmaker and Don
Morishita met with ten K-12 science teachers from the Kimberly
school system to discuss what science skills should be taught in
school. Dave, Glenn and Don shared some educational and
professional skills that they thought were important in their careers.
The group also discussed employment opportunities for students and
teachers and possible science projects or learning activities for
students. (KIM19991021N2)
October 12-14, 1999. Hank Mayland presented an invited paper on
'Plant nutrient content and animal health issues' to the 34th Pacific
Northwest Animal Nutrition Conference in Portland, Oregon. The
conference was attended by approximately 120 consulting
nutritionists, feed formulators, industry representatives and some
academic types. Mayland emphasized the role of increasing
potassium concentrations in feeds on subsequent magnesium
bioavailability to livestock and the intensification of this problem in
dairying areas in the United States. (KIM19991021N3)
Kimberly ARS research and recommendations is the focus of a four-
part series on the use of polyacrylamide (PAM) to hault irrigation-
induced erosion. The coverage has come from Dr. James Bauder,
Extension Agent, Montana State University (MSU) at Bozeman, who
writes a weekly "Agronomy Notes" series distributed on email by list
serve. In the four-part series Bauder synthesized and
comprehensively covered the essential aspects of the PAM erosion
technology, drawing heavily on Kimberly ARS published literature
and website information. The MSU list serve series provides
information directly to farmers, field men, consultants, Natural
Resources Conservation Service personnel, agribusiness
representatives, extension agents, and other scientists.
(KIM19991021N4)
October 16, 1999. The Times-News AG WEEKLY, featured ARS-
University of Idaho sugarbeet harvest activities on a dairy compost
study being conducted by University of Idaho and ARS. This is the
fourth year of a study being supported by the Idaho compost industry
and the United Dairymen of Idaho. There was a positive yield
response to a fall compost application at a reduced spring nitrogen
application rate. There is increasing interest to compost the dairy
manure with the tare dirt and `fly ash' waste from the sugarbeet
processing facilities and then to apply this product to the irrigated
land in southern Idaho. ARS research showed that crop productivity
can be restored on the eroded irrigated land by a dairy manure
application. (KIM19991021N5)
October 20, 1999. Bob Sojka and Dale Westermann met with 21
College of Southern Idaho students enrolled in a beginning soils
class taught by Anne Poole. The application of PAM technology to
control soil erosion in irrigated agriculture, and the use of soil
sampling and testing methodology to predict fertilization needs for
crop production and off- site water quality concerns. Another visit
was scheduled for the class to follow a soil sample from field
sampling through laboratory analysis. (KIM19991021N6)
"Gleanings," the newsletter of the Twin Falls and Snake River Soil
and Water Conservation Districts devoted almost its entire Fall 1999
newsletter to coverage of polyacrylamide (PAM) use in the Snake
River Plain with articles entitled "PAM use keeps growing", "Here's
some tips to help you get the most from your PAM", and "10 Tips for
using PAM." (KIM19991007N1)
As of October 1, 1999, the NWISRL PAM website (
PAM Page) has logged nearly
5,000 hits, and the frequency of hits is continuing to increase.
(KIM19991007N2)
September 29, 1999. An ARS News Service article prepared by
Marcia Wood on Hank Mayland's "PM-harvested hay" was also
released in a Spanish language format. The Spanish News Service
provides an additional format for reaching a growing audience
here and abroad. (KIM19991007N3)
09/13-17/99. Hank Mayland participated in the ARS National
Program Planning Workshop for NP-205, 'Rangelands, Pastures, and
Forages' section within the Natural Resources and Sustainable
Agricultural Systems division of ARS. About 60 ARS and 100
customers participated is this successful activity. Customers
identified needs and priorities. ARS participants identified six
research component programs to which the customer needs could
be assigned. The proposed components include: 1) Understanding
and Managing Ecosystems, 2) Plant Resources, 3) Forage
Management, 4) Grazing and the Environment, 5) Integrated Pest
Management, and 6) Integrated Systems. Hank will coordinate the
development and writing of the Forage Management component.
(KIM19990930N1)
09/23/99. Jim Entry, Gary Lehrsch, Rick Lentz, Dale Westermann,
and Jim Wright met with representatives of the Idaho potato
processing industry, State of Idaho Division of Environmental Quality
(DEQ), University of Idaho, and environmental consultants. The
purpose of the meeting was to discuss land applying potato
processing wastewater during the non-growing season. DEQ
personnel are developing guidelines to insure that groundwater and
the environment are protected during year-round wastewater land
application. In the meeting, Rick Lentz described instruments used
to sample the soil solution moving downward through soil profiles
while Jim Wright presented estimates of wintertime evaporation and
measurements of water and nutrients percolating through the soil
during a three-year study. ARS personnel recommended
approaches that could be used to measure and characterize water
and nutrient movement beneath land application sites throughout
Idaho and in surrounding states. (KIM19990930N2)
09/28/99. Joe Funk of SeedsMan magazine in Tallahassee, Florida,
telephoned Hank Mayland about the physical and chemical factors of
forage plants that animals use as selection cues. Hank noted that
ruminant animals prefer afternoon forage because of greater
nonstructural carbohydrate (sugars) content. Increased dry matter
intake and milk production were also discussed. Hank noted that
forage plant breeders should consider sugar concentrations as one of
the criterion of selection and forage plant selection and subsequent
seed production. (KIM19990930N3)
September 10, 1999. Gary Rawlings, Editor, Potato Grower
Magazine, contacted Dennis Kincaid for information on new water
and energy saving technology used with center pivot irrigation for use
in an upcoming article. (KIM19990916N1)
September 1-6, 1999. ARS-NWISRL personnel participated in
staffing the Magic Valley's Irrigators Water Quality Committee booth
at the Twin Falls County Fair held in Filer, Idaho. This year's booth
emphasis combined the efforts of the seven interest groups who
make up the watershed advisory group for the Mid-Snake TMDL.
Public interest was high in the group's ongoing efforts to identify the
amount and source of E-coli contamination in Rock creek, a tributary
to the Mid-Snake. Total attendance at this fair exceeds 100,000
people. (KIM19990916N2)
August 25-27, 1999. The Idaho Water Users Association sponsored a tour
for Sara Bittleman, Congressional Aide to Senator Ron Wyden, Oregon;
Shaun Parkin, Congressional Aide to Senator Robert Bennett, Utah;
Andrew Wheeler, Congressional Aide to Senator James Inhofe, Oklahoma;
Christine Russell, Congressional Aide to Senator Bob Smith, New
Hampshire; Kenneth Flanz, Congressional Aide to Senator Mike Crapo,
Idaho; and Tracy Henke, Congressional Aide to Senator Christopher Bond,
Missouri. Dave Bjorneberg, NWISRL Agricultural Engineer, and Glen Gier,
a cooperating farmer, conducted a brief polyacrylamide (PAM)
demonstration. Bjorneberg explained how PAM is applied to control
erosion and enhance infiltration for both furrow and sprinkler irrigation and
conducted demonstrations that showed how PAM stabilizes and
flocculates soil. He also explained that PAM binds to soil so very little
flows with water off a field, and it does not leach down through soil. PAM
was applied to several irrigation furrows so the congressional aides could
see how it worked in the field. They also learned how to irrigate with
siphon tubes, which seemed to be a highlight of their day. (KIM19990902N1)
August 27, 1999. Dave Bjorneberg and Jim Wright met with a group
of irrigation engineering graduate students from Utah State University
(USU). The students visited Kimberly as part of an irrigation tour of
South-Central Idaho. The tour sponsor was Professor Gaylord Skogerboe,
USU, and the tour organizer was Professor Rick Allen, University of Idaho.
The students received presentations in the research center conference
room and were taken to field research plots. Dr. Bjorneberg discussed
research on the use of polyacrylamide (PAM) to control soil erosion under
furrow irrigation. Dr. Wright discussed research on the movement of
solutes below the crop root zone with irrigation and evapotranspiration
during the nongrowing season. The students were able to observe a PAM
experiment in progress as part of Dr. Rick Lentz's research. The students
reported that they were exposed to several new and enlightening concepts
and appreciated the opportunity to see research in progress. (KIM19990902N2)
August 12, 1999. Dale Westermann was invited to give a
presentation on the role of nitrogen and phosphorus in
photosynthesis and plant physiology as related to management
practices at the 1999 crop production luncheons. The luncheons are
attended by area extension personnel, crop consultants, and field
men for fertilizer companies and specific crops produced in southern
Idaho. (KIM19990826N3)
August 19, 1999. Rick Lentz and Dale Westermann met with Dave
Ferguson (SCC), Bill Moore (RC&D) and Ralph Fisher (NRCS) to
discuss the potential of applying for a SARE grant to study the use
of hybrid poplars to filter surface runoff and drainage water from
irrigated land where animal manure was applied. Dissolved ortho-
phosphorus is a major contributor to water quality eutrophication
problems in the Boise River watershed. Relatively high
concentrations are found in surface and subsurface drainage water,
and drain concentrations increase during the non-irrigation season.
(KIM19990826N1)
August 19-21, 1999. Hank Mayland's observations and personal
visits with forage growers in central and eastern Idaho and central
Wyoming indicated their awareness of PM-forage-harvest technology
and its adoption by many growers. (KIM19990826N2)
August 24, 1999. Dave Bjorneberg, Jim Entry and Dale Westermann
were invited to discuss NWISRL research activities and needs with
U.S. Representative Mike Simpson and his Agricultural Liaison,
Charles Barnes. One research project discussed will compare the
use of hybrid poplars in agricultural production systems with irrigated
crops to capture nutrients and microorganisms from dairy lagoon water and
manure applications. This project was initially proposed for study by the
Idaho Dairymen Association and the Idaho NRCS. Richard Yankey, District
Conservationist at the NRCS Twin Falls Service Center, also attended the
meeting. The research staff needed at the NWISRL in order to fulfill its
mission were also discussed with Congressman Simpson. (KIM19990826N4)
August 8-11, 1999. Gary Lehrsch and Rick Lentz were invited to give oral
presentations at the 1999 Annual Conference of the Soil and Water
Conservation Society in Biloxi, Mississippi. Dr. Lehrsch presented a
paper entitled "Irrigated furrow positioning and N placement to increase N
uptake and protect water quality," and Dr. Lentz presented a paper
entitled " Use of PAM in surface irrigation to increase nutrient use
efficiency and protect soil and water quality." Dr. Lehrsch also
presented a second paper entitled "Soil organic C effects on aggregate
stability before and after simulated irrigation." This international
conference was attended by more than 1,500 customers, shareholders, and
partners gathered from across North America. (KIM19990819N1)
Brian Womack from the Idaho Press-Tribune in Nampa, Idaho,
contacted Dave Bjorneberg on August 4, 1999. He wanted
information about reduced tillage research at Kimberly and in
particular strip tillage. (KIM19990812N1)
August 2-6, 1999. Rick Lentz and Dale Westermann, as
representatives of the NWISRL, attended an ARS workshop in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, to formulate a National ARS Research
Program on water quality. This meeting was attended by about 60
shareholders, customers, and partners, and by a similar number of
ARS personnel. The customers, shareholders and partners identified
a wide range of critical water problems. These were nutrients,
synthetic organic compounds, pathogens, sediment, metals, model
development and evaluation, and risk assessment. ARS personnel
are presently in the process of preparing a draft statement covering
the research to be done on the problem areas in water quality. This
document will eventually become the National ARS Research
Program in water quality. (KIM19990812N2)
July 19, 1999. Rick Lentz attended the 1999 ASAE/CSAE-SCGR Annual
International Meeting, Toronto, Canada, where he gave a presentation
entitled “Applying polymers to irrigation water: Evaluating strategies
for furrow erosion control.” This paper summarized several years results
from polymer experiments done in southern Idaho and described how
polyacrylamide (PAM) application strategies can be used to maximize
erosion control or furrow infiltration, while minimizing PAM costs.
(KIM19990728N1)
July 19, 1999. Dennis Kincaid presented papers titled “Relative
performance of sprinkler and drip irrigation in southern Idaho” and “The
WEPP model for runoff and erosion prediction under sprinkler irrigation”
at the ASAE Annual International Meeting in Toronto, Canada.
(KIM19990728N2)
July 23, 1999. The June 3, 1999, issue of Canada's "Western Producer"
magazine carried an article 'Making hay in the afternoon.' A highlighted
quote from Hank Mayland of NWISRL was "The lack of cost involved in
producing the higher quality product should be very attractive to
farmers."
A copy of the article was faxed to Dr. Mayland this past week.
(KIM19990728N3)
July 26, 1999. The Idaho R.N. Irving Chapter of the Soil and Water
Conservation Society visited the ARS-NWISRL to learn more about the
research programs being conducted. While there, they toured the physical
facilities at both the main headquarters and south farm, and visited with
scientists at several field research studies. The studies were a comparison of
drip and sprinkler irrigation systems, PAM effects on deep percolation of
water, nutrients, and herbicides under furrow irrigation, the effects of
PAM- amended irrigation water on erosion and infiltration in straw-mulched
furrows, surge irrigation with PAM, subsoil reclamation with agricultural
products, runoff and erosion studies under rainfall simulation, and
conservation tillage practices under furrow irrigation. The Irving
Chapter membership includes individuals from state and federal
governmental agencies, soil conservation commissions, soil and water
conservation districts, as well as interested individuals. (KIM19990728N4)
July 15, 1999. Roger Brown and Shane Swafford were notified that
they passed the examination for classification as "Very Small Water
System" operators in the State of Idaho in conjunction with the
"Certification Program for Water Operators" as jointly administered
by the Association of Idaho Cities, the Idaho State Department of
Health and Welfare, and the American Water Works Association.
With this classification Mr. Brown and Mr. Swafford are certified to
maintain NWISRL's domestic water system in compliance with Idaho rules and
regulations. (KIM19990721N1)
July 19, 1999. The July issue of "Drovers," a magazine for applied
livestock management, carried an article entitled 'Hay's best harvest
time.' It highlighted Hank Mayland's work on PM- versus AM- harvesting
for improved forage quality and animal preference and performance.
(KIM19990721N2)
Bob Sojka was interviewed by phone on July 9, 1999, by Chet Peterson, a
writer for Crop Production Magazine and Successful Farming Magazine. Chet
will be preparing stories following up on the current direction of PAM
research. Sojka provided background information on how PAM-use in soil
came about and its spread to agriculture, and in the last several years to
irrigated agriculture for erosion control and infiltration enhancement.
The latter half of the interview concentrated on the spread of the
technology to one million acres of treated irrigated land in the U.S., and
inroads of the technology to construction site erosion control and for
retention pond clarification. Sojka also explained recent findings of
microorganism and weed seed sequestration and the potential magnitude of
positive environmental impact that these new findings could have for
reduced need of pesticides and herbicides. (KIM19990714N1)
Over the last two years, Dennis Kincaid and Dave Bjorneberg, Agricultural
Engineers at the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Lab (NWISRL),
Kimberly, ID, have assisted Burke Scholer, Hydrologist with the Idaho
Department of Water Resources (IDWR), with calibrating and testing
ultrasonic water flowmeters used in IDWR's water measurement program. The
ultrasonic flowmeters are used in the field to calibrate water meters on
irrigation wells and check irrigation pump efficiency. Using the
Hydraulics Building at the NWISRL has allowed IDWR to identify flowmeters
that meet their accuracy specifications before purchasing and to check
accuracy of existing flowmeters to ensure accurate data collection.
Nineteen different flowmeters were checked in 1999. (KIM19990714N2)
Bob Sojka and Dave Bjorneberg presented information about using
polyacrylamide (PAM) with furrow and sprinkler irrigation during two field
days on July 13 and 14, 1999. The field days were sponsored by the Twin
Falls and Snake River Conservation Districts through the Environmental
Quality Incentive Program (EQIP) educational assistance program, and lunch
was provided by the Twin Falls Canal Company. This was the third
consecutive year that the canal company and conservation districts
sponsored PAM field days or workshops. Thirty-seven farmers attended the
July 13 field day on a farm on the west end of the Twin Falls Irrigation
District. Approximately 25 farmers attended the second field day held at
the south research farm of the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research
Lab.
Those attending realize the importance of PAM in meeting total maximum
daily load (TMDL) goals for irrigation return flow. Several people stated
they would not furrow irrigate without PAM. (KIM19990714N1)
July 7, 1999. Dale Westermann met with a water quality task committee
being organized by the Idaho Dairymen's Association. This committee was
set up to evaluate the effect of dairy operations in Idaho on
nitrate-nitrogen leaching losses. Areas of concern are confined animal
feeding facilities and agricultural fields where manure or lagoon waters
are being applied. The meeting was attended by personnel from the
University of Idaho, Idaho Department of Agriculture, Idaho Dairymen
Association, individual dairy operations, a consulting company, and the
Idaho State Senate. Recent data published by USGS and others indicates
that nitrate-nitrogen concentrations are slowly increasing in Idaho's
ground water. The committee recommended that a research proposal be
jointly developed by those present to address this growing concern for
production agriculture.
(KIM19990708N1)
June 28, 1999. Hank Mayland was interviewed by Susan Littlefield
about HiMag tall fescue and grass tetany. Susan works for Farm
News Network, a radio broadcast system in Columbus, Nebraska,
reaching farmers in a four-state area. Hank also discussed PM/AM-
harvesting effects on forage quality, animal preference, and animal
production. He gave Ms. Littlefield information about the
polyacrylamide (PAM) research conducted at this location.
(KIM19990630N1)
June 21, 1999. Bob Sojka presented the invited paper "Edaphic
Platonism and Reality: Problems with Institutionalized Soil Quality
Indexing" at the Western Soil Science Society and Pacific Division of The
American Association for the Advancement of Science meetings in San
Francisco. The paper was part of a symposium on Soil Quality sponsored by
the University of California Kearney Foundation for Soil Science. Sojka
and ARS coauthors Dan Upchurch, Jim Entry and Ted Zobeck cautioned against
the difficulties of creating a soil quality index that must simultaneously
weigh the impact of soils on many competing, and often opposing, uses.
Often soil properties favoring crop production can have negative
environmental impacts. These and many other points were noted with a
caution against overly hasty institutionalization of the concept in view
of its numerous unresolved scientific questions. (KIM19990630N2)
June 1-11, 1999. Bob Sojka worked with the Natural Resources and
Sustainable Agricultural System program staff at ARS Headquarters
in Beltsville, Maryland, revising the Soil Resource Management
National Program. The SRM NP is being shaped as the result of
input from about 90 customers, stakeholders, and cooperators
obtained at a national workshop held in Denver, Colorado, in
February 1999. Their input, together with insights from 60 ARS
scientists in attendance, led to the formation of five program
components. Sojka led the component writing team for the Soil
Water component of the SRM NP. The final version of the SRM NP
will appear on the ARS National Program website for public comment
before the end of summer. (KIM19990616N1)
June 11, 1999. Dr. Marshall J. McFarland, Texas A&M University,
and his brother, Mr. Don McFarland, McFarland Farms, Twin Falls,
Idaho, visited with Jim Wright. Discussions concerned irrigation
research, TMDL's, and the use of remote sensing to determine crop
growth and water use. Dr. Wright in cooperation with Dr. Christopher
Neale of Utah State University will probably use some of the
McFarland Farms' fields irrigated with center pivots to study field
variability of potato growth and water use with the Utah State
University remote sensing aircraft along with other fields being
studied near Kimberly. (KIM19990616N2)
June 14, 1999. Dale Westermann was contacted by Jamie Brackett,
Agricultural Liaison of Idaho's Senator Larry Craig. This contact was
to request information on the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research
Laboratory's inability to replace retiring soil chemist C.W. Robbins
and its effect on the research program at the laboratory. Ongoing
and future research programs in animal waste and byproducts
utilization and management, and phosphorus threshold relationships
under irrigation as they affect nutrient management, including support
for TMDL's, will be reduced or terminated unless the position is filled.
The position can only be filled if new additional funds are appropriated
or captured from other retirements at the Laboratory.
(KIM19990616N3)
June 15 & 17, 1999. Dale Westermann met with Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS), State of Idaho Department of
Agriculture and University of Idaho personnel to continue
development of a nutrient management planning module to be used
under Idaho's One Plan web page. The objective of the module is to
help guide the producer or consultant in developing an initial nutrient
management plan for an animal/cropping system. A key component
of this module is the new NRCS nutrient management standard,
Code 590, being considered for adoption in Idaho. Idaho's dairies
already have to develop mandatory nutrient management plans.
(KIM19990616N4)
May 23-26, 1999. Rick Lentz and Dave Bjorneberg attended the 10th
Conference of the International Soil Conservation Organization at
Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, where Lentz gave an oral
presentation on the topic of “Influence of Irrigation Water Properties on
Furrow Infiltration” and Bjorneberg gave an oral presentation on the topic
of “Evaluating WEPP Predicted On-field Furrow Irrigation Erosion.” In
addition, Lentz entered into extensive discussions with soil scientist,
Xiaobin Wang, from the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences – Soil and
Fertilizer Institute, Peoples Republic of China. Lentz provided
information about the use of polyacrylamide as an erosion control soil
amendment. This meeting may lead to future collaborative research
opportunities in China. (KIM19990602N1)
May 25-26, 1999. Jim Wright participated in a committee meeting in
Denver, Colorado. The meeting sponsored by the ASCE Committee
on Evapotranspiration and Hydrology was held to discuss and select
Benchmark ET equations. The equations will be used to
characterize the evaporative demand under widely ranging conditions
to provide some standardization of the process of computing
reference ET values from meteorological data. The Irrigation
Association (IA) requested that the ASCE committee help establish
and define benchmark reference equations to bring commonality to
the various ET equations now in use. The proposed benchmark
equations would be ones that would be accepted by the United
States scientific community, water engineers, courts of law, policy
makers and irrigators. The meeting was attended by about 20
researchers, engineers and irrigation consultants from several
federal, state and private agencies. An equation was selected for a short
reference crop and for a tall reference crop. The proposed equations and
accompanying documentation will be drafted and sent out for review with
the goal of having standardized procedures in effect within a year.
(KIM19990602N2)
May 26, 1999. Bob Sojka was interviewed on the telephone by Judy
Taggert, a writer for "The Runoff Report." The interview discussed the
history and current status of the PAM technology developed for prevention
of irrigation induced erosion and water quality protection. The PAM
technology saw practical development for use in irrigated agriculture
through team investigative efforts conducted from 1991 to the present at
the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory. PAM now
inexpensively protects about 1 million acres annually from irrigation
induced erosion while aiding infiltration and protecting surface water
quality from unwanted nutrients, pesticides, BOD-raising dissolved
organics, weed seed and microorganisms carried to surface riparian waters
by irrigation return flows. (KIM19990602N3)
June 1, 1999. Bob Ohlensehlen, Kristin Keith and Dean Falk,
University of Idaho, Clarence Prestwich and Jim Wood, NRCS, and
Mike Mitchell and Jeni Beddoes, Idaho Department of Agriculture,
and Larry Freeborn and Dale Westermann, ARS, met to discuss a
project to develop an automated nutrient management planning
module to be used as a stand-alone tool and as a part of the Idaho
One Plan. It will be a user-friendly, expert program that can be used to
design a nutrient management plan for confined animal feeding operations,
as well as for general crop production. It will include components on
soils, cropping, nutrient sources, facility sizing, irrigation, and
environmental risk assessment. Eventually it may also include an animal
ration component. The outcome of this project will simplify nutrient
management compliance by the dairy industry, stimulate awareness and
action by other agricultural producers towards nutrient management, and
provide an opportunity to educate the general public on what agriculture
is doing to protect water quality and the environment. Additional
information on this project may be obtained from Jim Wood, NRCS,
(jwood@agri.state.id.us). (KIM19990602N4)
May 10-15, 1999. Dave Bjorneberg traveled to Spain with Bert
Clemmens and Theodor Strelkoff from the ARS-Water Conservation
Lab in Phoenix, Tom Trout from the ARS-Water Management
Research Lab in Fresno, and Tom Spofford from the NRCS-National
Water and Climate Center in Portland. The main purpose of the trip
was to discuss surface irrigation erosion modeling, developing
erosion databases, and future cooperative research with Luciano
Mateos and others from the Sustainable Agriculture Institute of the
Scientific Research Council. While in Spain, they also visited
several irrigation districts and discussed water management
problems. The trip was funded through a competitive grant from the
U.S.-Spain Science and Technology program. (KIM19990526N1)
May 14, 1999. ARS forage breeders Kevin Jensen and Kay Asay of
Logan Utah, consulted with Hank Mayland. Based on Mayland’s
research results on forage quality parameters, Jensen and Asay are
going to start using soluble carbohydrate concentrations in forages
as one of their selection criterion. The group discussed various
methodologies to accomplish this. (KIM19990526N2)
May 20, 1999. Hank Mayland was interviewed via telephone by Mike
Raine of the Canadian Western Producer Magazine on PM/AM-
cutting of hay. Mike is a journalist working in Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan. (KIM19990526N3)
May 10-11, 1999. Dr. Art Schipper, PWA Associate Director, and Larry
Rolle, PWA Budget and Fiscal Officer, visited the Northwest Irrigation and
Soils Research Laboratory. While at the Laboratory, Dr. Schipper and Mr.
Rolle reviewed the Laboratory's annual resource management plan for fiscal
year 2000. They also used this opportunity to became aquainted with the
research activities of the individual scientists and the physcial
facilities at the NWISRL. (KIM19990512N1)
April 21, 1999. Jim Wright and Gary Lehrsch met with Dan Bruner, a
geologist at the Pocatello, Idaho, office of Cascade Earth Sciences, Ltd.
(CES). CES, an environmental consulting firm that serves Northwest
industries and municipalities, is presently helping Idaho potato
processors safely apply processing wastewater to irrigated vegetated
disposal sites. CES personnel design the irrigation systems to comply
with Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) standards and
guidelines, developed in part using ARS research from Kimberly. Dan was
particularly interested in ARS research on wintertime evaporation and
research on leaching of bromide and nitrate. With DEQ's approval, CES
personnel will collect data from a few instrumented disposal sites
throughout a three-year period to determine the appropriateness of the
guidelines. Dan asked ARS to help review their proposal/work plan and to
take part in quarterly meetings to review progress. ARS researchers from
Kimberly agreed to assist CES as requested. In the future, CES may also
help support related ARS research. Additional meetings between ARS
scientists and CES personnel are likely. (KIM19990505N1)
April 26-29, 1999. Earl Morris, Kara Vander Linden and Dale Westermann
attended the ARS Pacific West Area (PWA) Leadership Conference in
Berkeley, California. The theme of the conference was `Leading Change,'
and the purposes were to become better acquainted with others in PWA
leadership positions and to review critical areas affecting the research
and administrative programs, and personnel of ARS. Also during the
conference, several PWA individuals were formally recognized for their
outstanding contributions in research and administration. (KIM19990505N2)
April 27, 1999. Jim Wright and Kris Aase presented a poster showing
ongoing research at the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory
and provided information on ARS research and career opportunities at the
College of Southern Idaho, Twin Falls, Agriculture Career Fair.
(KIM19990505N3)
April 29-30, 1999. Hank Mayland, invited Goddard Lecturer at University
of Tennessee, presented seminars on 'Plant attributes affecting livestock
selection and intake' and 'Ruminant animal preferences for afternoon vs.
morning forages' to about 80 faculty and students. Numerous discussions
were held with small groups and visits were made to several tall fescue
forage and grazing experiments. (KIM19990505N4)
May 3, 1999. Jim Wright was interviewed by KMVT news personnel in
preparation for a TV series that will be presented mid-May. The series is
intended to help educate home owners and irrigation farmers on the basic
factors involved in evaporation of water from lawns and irrigated land.
Idaho Power Company, the City of Twin Falls, and Twin Falls Canal Company
are promoting the effort as a means of conserving water while also
reducing peak demands for electricity and water. After the educational
series of discussions, plans are for the daily weather reports presented
by the KMVT television station to contain information on
evapotranspiration from lawns for use by home owners in scheduling
irrigation of lawns and perhaps a reference evapotranspiration value for
use by farmers in scheduling irrigation of crops. The source of the daily
evapotranspiration data will be the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's AgriMet
network. The AgriMet network is based on principles developed by ARS at
the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory (NWISRL), Kimberly.
An AgriMet weather station is located at and cooperatively supported by
ARS at the NWISRL. (KIM19990505N5)
May 3, 1999. George Vandemark, Research Leader, Prosser, Washington,
visited the lab and gave a seminar entitled 'Assessment of genetic
diversity among agave species using AFLPs and RAPDs.' George joined ARS
at Prosser in August 1998. His research assignment is 'genetic
improvement in alfalfa.' The visit allowed him an opportunity to get
acquainted with Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory staff,
resources, and interests. (KIM19990505N6)
Dr. Bob Sojka, USDA-ARS Soil Scientist, Northwest Irrigation and Soils
Research Laboratory, Kimberly, Idaho, was invited by the Editor in Chief
of the American Society of Agronomy, Dr. Jerry Hatfield, to serve as
co-editor for the upcoming revision of the ASA monograph on Irrigation.
Dr. Sojka will co-edit the monograph revision with Dr. Robert Loscano of
Texas A & M University. The monograph is one of the most comprehensive
source materials in use world-wide for delivering fundamental information
on the practice of irrigated agriculture in all its forms. It considers
the entire spectrum of important issues affecting irrigation in a single
comprehensive volume. The revision is expected to proceed along an
approximate three year timetable, with consideration for revision of
existing material and subject matter as well as addition of new topics and
new technologies not previously included. (KIM19990505N7)
April 10-11, 1999. Hank Mayland was invited to present a paper at a
meeting on ‘Emerging Techniques for Studying the Nutrition of Free-
ranging Herbivores’ in San Antonio, Texas. His invited paper was on
‘Techniques to Quantify Plant Physical and Chemical Factors Used
as Cues by Ruminants.’ This two-day satellite meeting was
attended by about 100 international scientists. The PM/AM-
harvesting of forage was discussed and a five-minute video of the
steer preference trial received excellent response from the
participants.
(KIM19990422N1)
April 12-16, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in the Fifth
International meeting on the Nutrition of Herbivores. Over 200
scientists were registered for this meeting. Each of the nine half-day
sessions began with two plenary papers and were followed by a
break, related posters, and a discussion on the session topic.
PM/AM cycling of forage quality and subsequent animal response
was mentioned in eight of the nine discussions. Plans were
discussed with Canadian researchers at Brandon, Manitoba for them
to evaluate beef cattle production on PM/AM-harvested and
conditioned alfalfa. Several requests were made for copies of the
‘preference’ video.
(KIM19990422N2)
April 13-14, 1999. Dr. Floyd Horn, ARS Administrator, was informed
of the PM/AM forage quality research and accompanying technology
transfer by ARS by Dr. Hank Mayland, Soil Scientist. Dr. Horn was
very interested in the concept and results and encouraged continued
pursuit of the cooperative research.
(KIM19990422N3)
April 20, 1999. Mr. Cyril Collin, Project Manager-Agriculture Division
of SNF Floerger, France, and Mr. Jerry Raman, Business Director-
Customer Support and Marketing of Chemtall, Inc., Georgia, visited
with Kimberly ARS researchers David Bjorneberg, Jim Entry, Rick
Lentz, and Bob Sojka. SNF is one of the world's largest producers of
polymers, including polyacrylamides used in agriculture. Several
environmental and production-related problems facing the domestic
and international agriculture industry were discussed. In particular,
what was the potential use of PAM to provide solutions for these
problems? The SNF-ARS discussions may lead to development of
one or more cooperative research projects.
(KIM19990422N4)
April 5-7, 1999. Dale Westermann attended a committee meeting in
Beltsville, Maryland, planning the ARS National Water Quality
workshop to be held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, August 3-6, 1999.
The purpose of the workshop is to obtain input from customers,
partners and shareholders on critical issues that ARS research
should address. ARS will then develop a national research program
that addresses these issues. Additional information on this
workshop and other ARS National Programs may be obtained at the
ARS website address http://www.ars.usda.gov/. While in Beltsville,
he also consulted with Drs. Al Dedrick, Dale Bucks and Bob Wright
on research and program issues affecting the NWISRL.
(KIM19990415N1)
April 6-7, 1999. Andrew Mutziger met with Drs. Scott Yates, Fred
Ernst, and Jay Gan of the USDA-ARS Salinity Laboratory Pesticide
Unit, Riverside, California. Dr. Ernst showed Andrew two automated
systems he has developed to monitor fumigant
concentrations/transport in soil and charcoal columns. The system
uses a auto-sampling GC for the monitoring and solenoid valves for
switching positions within a column and for switching between
columns. This work will be presented at the ASA, CSSA, and SSSA
Annual Meetings, October 31 - November 4, 1999.
(KIM19990415N2)
April 9, 1999. Dave Bjorneberg, Jim Entry, Sheryl Ver Wey and Dale
Westermann attended a meeting with members of the NRCS, and
Idaho Division of Environmental Quality and Department of Agriculture
to discuss an agro-forestry project to utilize dairy wastes. This
project is being expanded and has potential to become a viable
research project. Hybrid populars are being considered as an
alternative crop to capture dairy wastes and to reduce the land area
necessary for waste utilization without affecting water quality or the
environment.
(KIM19990415N3)
March 23-24, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in the 28th Annual
Pacific Northwest Grazing Symposium at the University of Idaho,
Moscow. Dr. Mayland was invited to present an oral and written
paper on "Plant Attributes Affecting Grazing Behavior." He also
promoted the benefits of PM- vs AM-harvest management on animal
preference, performance, and production. About 250 ranchers,
researchers, students, and information people were present from
northwestern United States, Canada, and Australia. (KIM19990401N1)
March 17, 1999. Bob Sojka and Dave Bjorneberg met with Neil King
and the staff of the Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument to
discuss problems and solution approaches to controlling water
seepage from irrigation above the fossil beds. Water seepage occurs from
irrigation supply ditches and storage ponds in the 19,000 acres currently
under irrigation on the agricultural plateau above the monument. The
seepage is channeled to cliff faces along the Snake River by underlying
rock and gravel strata. The channeled water has been linked to several
landslides in the last two decades. These landslides threaten the
integrity of the fossil sites at the monument. Sojka and Bjorneberg were
asked by the Monument's head ranger, Neil King, to explore the possibility
of research linkages with ARS for helping to develop a strategy to elimate
or manage the water seepage from the irrigation project. A presentation
by the monument staff to the NWISRL science staff is scheduled for late
March or early April with continued contact and possible cooperation as
the goal. (KIM19990325N1)
March 18, 1999. Michael S. Mathews, Regional Director for Idaho
U.S. Senator Larry Craig, visited Dale Westermann, NWISRL
Director, about the ARS research program at NWISRL. The general
organization of ARS on a national, regional and local scale, how
individual research projects are selected, the mission of the
NWISRL, and how research is organized into CRIS projects and
National ARS programs were discussed. Each of the current
research projects being conducted at NWISRL under each of the
three CRIS projects and how they impact the shareholder/user was
presented. Mr. Mathews also toured the physical facilities while at the
NWISRL. (KIM19990325N2
March 16-18, 1999. Chuck Robbins spent two and one-half days on
the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe Farm and Ranch Enterprise Irrigation
Development Project. They are about 70% through developing 7,634
acres of center pivot irrigated lands using about 109 center pivots of
various sizes. These previously unirrigated lands have moderately high
soluble salts and some localized sodic spots. Dr. Robbins was asked to
select three sites based on first year corn yield reductions, supervise
digging soil pits and then during the field tour portion of the two-day
symposium, describe to the group the salinity and sodicity effects on crop
remedies for the problem areas. He also spent one- half day with Ben
Pintor and Nicholas Murietta of the Tohono O'odham Tribe Farming Authority
on salt and sodium problems expected on lands they plan to start
irrigating for cotton production in southwestern Arizona. (KIM19990325N3
March 6, 1999. Hank Mayland met with Hussein Hussein, Animal
Nutritionist, at University of Nevada-Reno. They discussed
progress on cooperative program to assess energy and protein
fermentation of PM/AM harvested alfalfa hay. (KIM19990318N1)
March 8-12, 1999. Hank Mayland successfully conducted tensile
breaking force measurements on grass leaves using equipment
located at the USDA-ARS, WRRC, Albany, California. Kay Sue
Gregorski, WRRC chemist, demonstrated use of the
instrumentation. This project on physical strength of forage
grasses is in cooperation with Jennifer MacAdams, Utah State
University, Logan. (KIM19990318N2)
March 8, 1999. Hank Mayland discussed the PM- vs AM-harvest
effects on forage quality and showed the 'preference video' to Art
Schipper, Associate Director, and Andy Hammond, Assistant
Director for the Pacific West Area. Both were interested in the
technology transfer effort and encouraged continuation of such as
being a part of our mission. (KIM19990318N3)
March 8, 1999. Hank Mayland met with WRRC Jim Roitman and
Gloria Merrill, Research Chemists, at WRRC, Albany, California,
about characterizing volatiles in PM/AM harvested hay. Volatiles
from one pair of PM/AM hay had been scanned by GC-MS. An
intense examination of the volatile profiles will be necessary before
conclusions about possible cues can be drawn. Trapping of volatiles from
each of the alfalfa hays (6 from the 1997 Preference Study and 18 from
1998) is progressing and will be followed by GC-MS. (KIM19990318N4)
March 11, 1999. Gary Lehrsch was invited by Linda Baird,
Community Relations Director for the Twin Falls School District, to
present information on careers in environmental science at the
1999 Twin Falls High School Career Day. About 78 students,
primarily sophomores, attended to learn the major duties of soil
scientists, agricultural engineers, and other related environmental
scientists. Gary recommended courses to be scheduled in both
high school and college, distributed career literature, and
discussed opportunities for summer employment in the area with
interested students. (KIM19990318N5)
March 3, 1999. James Wright was invited to participate at the Idaho Hay
Association 1999 Annual Convention and present a discussion on "Irrigation
Management of Alfalfa." The conference session was organized to promote
the basics of quality hay production. About 90 hay producers, company and
university specialists and other interested individuals attended the
session. (KIM19990311N1)
March 3, 1999. Dale Westermann attended the annual meeting of the
WCC-103 Western Nutrient Management committee in Salt Lake
City, Utah. The purpose of this committee is to improve nutrient
management recommendations and to improve the use of soil, water
and plant analysis for environmentally sound crop production
practices. Representatives from each of the thirteen western states,
commerical companies and governmental agencies attended, as well as guests
from Canada and Mexico. (KIM19990311N2)
March 4-5, 1999. Dale Westermann attended the Third Western
Nutrient Management Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah. He
presented an invited oral paper entitled `Phosphorus Losses from
Irrigated Calcareous Soils,' which was coauthored by Chuck
Robbins, Mel Brown, Rick Lentz, Dave Bjorneberg and Kris Aase, all
scientists at the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory
(NWISRL). Over 30 oral and poster papers on plant nutrition and soil
fertility issues were presented and published in a conference proceedings.
Conference themes included heavy metals in fertilizers, nitrogen
mineralization and management, and phosphorus management concerns. Dale
Westermann co-chaired the conference for the third time with Terry
Tindall, Chief Agronomist for J.R. Simplot. The conference is sponsored
by the WCC-103 Western Nutrient Management committee and meets biannually.
Kara Vander Linden and Mary Ann Kay, employees at the NWISRL, helped with
registration. (KIM19990311N3)
March 5, 1999. James Wright was invited to participate in a
discussion with the KMVT television station news director in Twin
Falls, Idaho, on the potential for including evapotranspiration (ET)
information in the evening weather report. If this does become a reality,
the source of the daily data will likely be the U. S. Bureau of
Reclamations AgriMet service which is based on procedures and functional
relationships developed at the Kimberly ARS Laboratory. Others in
attendance at the discussion were representatives of Idaho Power Company,
Twin Falls City, Twin Falls Canal Company, and a local representative of a
turf irrigation equipment supply company. The vision of the project is to
educate the public on the relationship of daily weather to water use by
lawns and agricultural crops and to provide specific daily ET data so that
irrigators can more nearly match irrigations to plant water needs. This
will help reduce electrical power demands, city and canal company water
demands and reduce run-off from irrigated lawns and fields which in turn
will help reduce chemical loading of receiving streams. (KIM19990311N4)
February 19, 1999. Hank Mayland presented an invited seminar and
follow-up discussion at the University of Wyoming, Laramie. The
topic was 'Advantages of Afternoon vs Morning Harvesting on Forage
Quality and Animal Eating Behaviour.' About 40 students and faculty
attended. (KIM19990302N1)
February 21-25, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in a joint meeting
of Society for Range Management and American Forage and
Grassland Council held in Omaha, Nebraska. He presented an
invited paper on 'Anti-quality of Forage Associated with Minerals'. At
other times he promoted the concept of how afternoon harvesting
favors forage quality, ruminant preference, and milk production by
dairy cows. (KIM19990302N2)
February 22-25, 1999. Robert Sojka, Gary Lehrsch, and J. Kristian
Aase, by invitation, attended the National Program Workshop on Soil
Resource Assessment and Management held in Denver, Colorado.
Dr. Sojka was also a member of the planning team for the workshop.
People in attendance represented a cross section of ARS scientists
and administrators from across the nation and a compliment of
representatives from industry, universities, non-ARS government
agencies, and farmers. Our representatives participated in
discussion groups and in general discussion sessions. Several
scientists from Kimberly will participate in the final writing of the
National Program. (KIM19990302N3)
February 26, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in the USDA-ARS
Grazing Lands Management National Program Planning. Three
break out groups identified 5 to 8 elements for inclusion. Program
title was revised to 'Rangeland, Pastures, and Forages. Bob
Masters, Doug Johnson, Herman Mayeux and 5 other ARS
scientists were identified to summarize comments into working
document for component workshops to be scheduled for September
or October. Suggested Elements were:
1. Water, Watershed Management, Environmental Quality
2. Grazing Land Ecosystem Processes
3. Develop, Improve, Evaluate Germplasm for Forage/Conservation
4. Forage Management and Improvement
5. Vegetation and Grazing Land Management
6. Integrated Production Systems
7. Stewardship of Grazing Land Resources
8. Grazing Lands Pest Management (KIM19990302N4)
The Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory's work
developing practical use of polyacrylamide (PAM) to control irrigation-
induced soil erosion was prominently featured in the March 1999
issue of "Erosion Control," the official journal of the International
Erosion Control Association. The article cited the halting of a million
tons of sediment loss in 1995, the first year of PAM
commercialization for irrigation-induced erosion control. This
prevention was associated with PAM-use on 50,000 acres in 1995.
Industry estimates placed PAM-use at about a million acres in 1998.
(KIM19990302N5)
March 1, 1999. Mark Nelson of Agri-Concepts International, stopped
by the lab to visit Hank Mayland about PM- vs AM-harvesting
technology. This was a follow-up to Mr. Nelson’s having accessed
information on our home page. Mr. Nelson is a rancher in north
central Nebraska and dealer for direct-fed and ensiling microbials.
(KIM19990302N6)
February 15-18, 1999. Rick Lentz and Dave Bjorneberg were invited
by James Valiant to participate in Colorado State University's (CSU) 1999
PAM (polyacrylamide) Workshop tour. The workshops were sponsored by CSU
Cooperative Extension and US-EPA in cooperation with the USDA-NRCS, and
held at four different locations (Lamar, Sterling, Greeley and Delta).
They were organized to provide producers and land managers in Colorado and
the surrounding states with the latest PAM application technology and to
provide a venue for discussions of environmental concerns. Dr. Lentz
discussed appropriate PAM application techniques under surface irrigation
and the environmental ramifications associated with PAM use, and Dr.
Bjorneberg presented information about applying PAM through sprinkler
irrigation systems. PAM technology is increasingly being used in Colorado
and other western states to conserve soil and water resources.
(KIM19990225N1)
February 23, 1999. Dale Westermann was invited by the College of
Southern Idaho (CSI) Ag-Forum Student group to present a seminar
on agricultural research careers. About 60 students attended the
noon seminar from several different agricultural majors to learn about the
wide variety of agricultural research careers available today, what
agricultural research activities will be like in the future, and the
career opportunities available in ARS. CSI is a two year school and
offers selected four year degrees in cooperation with University of Idaho,
Moscow. (KIM19990225N2)
Febuary 17, 1999. Dale Westermann participated in a general
production potato workshop with about 30 potato growers from
Malheur County, Ontario, Oregon. He discussed phosphorus and
potassium fertilization practices for potato production and the use of
petiole nutrient concentrations to determine nutrient sufficencies. The
workshop was organized by Lynn Jensen, Malheur County Extension Specialist.
(KIM19990219N1)
Febuary 17, 1999. Chuck Robbins and Dale Westermann were
visited by Jim Woods, Idaho NRCS Water Quality Specialist, to
discuss phosphorus loading concerns on the lower Boise River. This
stream segment is on the 303(d) list, for which a TMDL is being
developed. Phosphorus is high during both the summer and winter
months. About 70-80% of the total phosphorus load is present as
ortho-phosphorus. Historial data shows that ortho-phosphorus
concentrations in the groundwater of the lower Boise Valley are
usually greater than 0.15 mg/L. Several ideas were outlined to help
identify the source(s) of phosphorus entering the Boise River from drains
and natural streams. (KIM19990219N2)
February 2-3, 1999. Hank Mayland presented 'Harvesting Time
Effects on Forage Quality' to about 400 producers at the Mid
America Alfalfa Expo held at Hastings, Nebraska. Information on
'PM- vs AM-harvesting effects on forage quality' was well received.
Attendees were from a 10 state area. Round bales predominate in this area
and buyers depend on relative feed value indices of hay quality. (KIM19990211N1)
February 4-5, 1999. Hank Mayland discussed results of PM/AM
harvesting effects on quality, intake, and lactation by ruminants with 140
alfalfa producers at the New Mexico Alfalfa Association meeting in
Albuquerque. Attendees were from New Mexico and west Texas. These hay
producers have challenges similar to those of those in southern California
where high day and night temperatures occur. Big Bales predominate in
this production area. (KIM19990211N2)
February 3, 1999. Hank Mayland was interviewed about the PM/AM-
forage harvesting technology on KRVN 880 Farm Radio in Lexington,
Nebraska. (KIM19990211N3)
February 9, 1999. The PM/AM-forage harvesting technology was
included in nationally syndicated radio news by Paul Harvey's News
and Commentary. (KIM19990211N4)
February 4-12. Bob Sojka traveled to Palmerston, North New
Zealand as an invited guest and keynote speaker of the New Zealand
Lime and Fertilizer Institute's 1999 annual conference and workshop. He
presented the paper entitled "Challenges for identifying management
principles--Integrating emerging modern technologies and philosophies."
The paper was co-authored with Dr. Dan Upchurch, director of the ARS
Cropping Systems Research Laboratory, Lubbock, Texas. In addition to the
conference, Dr. Sojka spent the week working with collaborators in New
Zealand which has also resulted in visits and exchanges of New Zealand
scientists with the NWISRL at Kimberly. (KIM19990211N5)
January 20-30, 1999. Hank Mayland presented results of 'Morning and afternoon harvesting effects on forage quality'
and 'Animal preference and lactation response to morning and harvested forage' at the Central Oregon Forage
Conference and Trade Show, Redmond, Oregon. The recommended PM vs AM harvesting, while
adding another level of complexity to the producer's already busy schedule, was reinforced
by the visual evidence of animal preference for PM- vs AM-harvested hay shown in the time-lapse video.
Producers enjoyed the presentation as evidenced by immediate and followup questions.
About 50 copies of the USDA-ARS-NWISRL Station Note 99-01 'Optimize forage quality by afternoon haravesting' were
picked up by attendees. (KIM19990203N1)
January 26, 1999. Rick Lentz and Jim Entry met with University of Idaho researcher Joel Green
to discuss the potential use of polyacrylamide for reducing y phosphorus loading in aquaculture waste waters.
There is considerable interest in the development of a technology that effectively and rapidly removes solid fish
wastes from raceway waters, as this would greatly reduce P-loadings in aquaculture return flows. (KIM19990203N2)
January 26-27, 1999. Hank Mayland participated in the Washington State Hay Growers Association 1999 annual
hay conference and trade show in Pasco, Washington. Using videoplayer and LCD projector and slides, he shared
the developing technology about "The Effects of Morning and Evening Harvesting on Forage Quality, Animal Preference,
and Production." There was much interest among the 200 registered forage producers, many of whom were from
the Columbia Basin. About 100 copies of USDA-ARS-NWISRL Station Note 99-01 'Optimize forage quality by afternoon
harvesting' were picked up by participants. (KIM19990203N3)
January 27-29, 1999. Five USDA-ARS scientists from the NWISRL attended and presented research papers at the
"Water Quality Beyond 2000: Meeting our TMDL Challenge" conference held in Boise, Idaho. A wide range
of over 250 state and federal regulatory and service agency personnel, and representatives from grower/producer
organizations attended the conference. ARS papers presented were `Efficacy of polyacrylamide mixtures to filter
nutrients and bacteria pollutants from wastewater’ - Jim Entry; `Best management practices of grazing to meet
TMDLs’ - Glenn Shewmaker; `Comparing deep percolation soil water and solute losses from conventional vs
PAM-managed furrow irrigation’ - Rick Lentz; `Phosphorus relationships in irrigated soils’ - Dale Westermann;
and `N placement and furrow irrigation management to increase N uptake by corn and minimize nitrate
leaching’ - Gary Lehrsch. There was high interest in all sessions as Idaho is in the process of developing TMDLs for
over 700 stream segments listed on the 303(d) list. (KIM19990203N4)
January 21, 1999. D.T. Westermann and Jeff Stark, UI, led a
workshop at the 1999 University of Idaho Potato Conference and
Eastern Idaho Ag Expo held in Pocatello, Idaho. The workshop was
on interpreting tissue tests for macro- and micronutrients for use in
fertigation of potatoes during tuber growth. Idaho's potato school is
attended by over 1000 growers, consultants and extension personnel
from over 15 states. It is considered the premiere production focused
potato school in the U.S. (KIM19990128N1)
January 16, 1999. In an article entitled "Twin Falls Canal Company
honors 7 at annual meeting," the Magic Valley Ag Weekly reported
this year's winners of farmer environmental awards for protecting
water quality. All seven award recipients cited use of polyacrylamide
(PAM) as a key element in their soil conservation and return-flow water
quality protection program. The practical field technology for use of
PAMs for erosion control in irrigated agriculture was developed by
scientists of the Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory
(NWISRL) in work that has been ongoing since 1991. About a million acres
of irrigated land are now estimated to benefit from PAM's erosion reducing
and infiltration enhancing properties. Research continues on several
aspects of PAM use, with four technical articles appearing in scientific
journals in the last month on the topic authored by NWISRL scientists.
Among new finding are interactions of PAM use with furrow traffic,
retention of weed seed and sequestration of microorganisms in furrow
irrigation water treated with PAM. As new aspects of PAM management
continue to be discovered, its potential for irrigation management and
environmental benefit seem even greater than originally anticipated. (KIM19990121N1)
The 1999 special forage issue of John Deere's "The Furrow"
magazine carried the following under the headline of 'A.M. versus
P.M. Cutting:'
In a recent test, cattle, sheep, and goats all preferred
afternoon-cut grass hay over morning-cut hay from the same field. In
fact, the animals ate all of the p.m. hay before they ate any of the
a.m. hay, according to Hank Mayland, a USDA scientist at ... Kimberly,
Idaho. The afternoon-cut hay gave the animals more energy, and it was
much easier to digest, Mayland says. He explains that plants produce
carbohydrates while the sun shines, but they consume some of the
carbohydrates during the night, lowering the energy content of forage
cut in the morning. (KIM19990121N2)
January 12, 1999. Dennis Kincaid and Andrew Mutziger visited with
Kelvin Jones at his 400+ acre farm north of Jerome, Idaho. Mr.
Jones has three pivots that typically run simultaneously off of one
well with an average flow of 2250 gpm. The lower pivot has too much
pressure. Measurements were taken for installation of a 6" test
version of Dr. Kincaid's patented, pressure regulating butterfly valve.
(KIM19990121N3)
January 6-7, 1999. Jim Wright and Dave Bjorneberg conducted
technical seminars at the 1999 Idaho irrigation Equipment Show in
Burley, Idaho. Dr. Bjorneberg presented information about using
PAM with surface and sprinkler irrigation to reduce erosion and
improve infiltration. Dr. Wright discussed cooling effects of sprinkler
irrigation. Twenty-five to thirty-five people attended their seminars. (KIM19990113N1)
January 7, 1999. Dale Westermann and Hank Mayland visited with
Lex Gregory, Burley High School Vocational Agriculture and Biology
Teacher, at our lab. Mr. Gregory toured the facility, was informed of
overall research programs and our web site, introduced to various farm
projects that his students might consider, given employment options for
students at least 18 years of age and told about ARS's science teacher
internships. (KIM19990113N2)
January 11, 1999. Jeff Cline, Laboratory Specialist, from Rocky
Mountain Resource Labs in Jerome, Idaho visited ARS soil
scientists, Chuck Robbins and Dale Westermann. They discussed
various laboratory procedures to use when analyzing soils for plant
available nitrate- and ammonium- nitrogen, phosphorus, and
potassium. The Rocky Mountain Resource Labs do animal feed and
milk quality analyses for the Magic Valley's dairy and livestock
industries. (KIM19990113N3)
January 5-6, 1999. Dale Westermann was a panel member in a one-
half day potato production workshop at the winter meeting of the
Idaho Crop Production Association 26th Annual Fertilizer and
Chemical Conference held in Jackpot, Nevada. He also gave a 30-
minute oral paper on methods to enhance nutrient uptake by irrigated
crops. Over 650 fertilizer and chemical dealers and fieldmen from Idaho,
Oregon, Utah and Nevada attended this educational conference. (KIM19990107N1)
December 18, 1998. Bob Sojka journeyed to the Department of
Plant and Natural Resource Sciences at Montana State University
(MSU) to present a seminar entitled "Reinventing Irrigation with
PAM." The seminar summarized the past seven years of research
from Kimberly's NWISRL using PAM to halt irrigation-induced
erosion and manage infiltration. The seminar was at the behest of
Dr. James Bauder of MSU who extended an invitation to participate
in several demonstrations and research projects for which the PAM
technology might be adapted in Montana. While there, Dr. Sojka
turned over his Technical Editorship of Soil Science Society of
America Journal Division S-6 -- Soil and Water Conservation -- and
several boxes of related files to Dr. Bauder who will take over that post
beginning in January. Dr. Sojka served in the Technical Editorship for
Division S-6 for two three-year terms.
(KIM19990107N2)
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