Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10978587 | Journal of Dairy Science | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Ammonia emitted from animal feeding operations is an air pollutant contributing to the formation of fine particulate matter (PM2.5), considered a major environmental risk to human health. In the United States, farm animals are the greatest contributor to gaseous ammonia emissions. Ammonia reacts with atmospheric nitric and sulfuric acids to form PM2.5 (nitrate and sulfate), but the proportion of PM2.5 attributable to ammonia emitted from animal farming operations has not been quantified. Thus, the objective of this analysis was to estimate the contribution of ammonia emitted from farm animals to PM2.5 in the United States. The following approach was used: (1) the amount of ammonium in sulfate and nitrate PM2.5 was calculated based on chemically speciated measurements published by the United States Environmental Protection Agency; and (2) the amount of ammonium in sulfate and nitrate PM2.5 originating from livestock was assumed equal to the fraction of the total ammonia emissions attributable to livestock. Across different regions of the United States and under different weather conditions, PM2.5 formed from ammonia emitted from livestock operations were estimated to contribute on average from 5 to 11% of the total PM2.5 concentrations. In certain areas (North Central, for example) and in cool weather, farm animal contribution to atmospheric PM2.5 concentration may be as much as 20%.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
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Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
A.N. Hristov,