Purpose
Livestock manure nutrients can be variable depending on animal species, age, diet, management, housing, climate, and manure storage and handling. Thousands of samples are analyzed every year by agricultural laboratories across the United States (U.S.). While many published manure characteristics are two decades old, this study provides an updated glimpse into more recent manure data from thousands of samples across the country and reviewed possible trends from 2012-2022 by U.S. regions for common animal categories.
What Did We Do?
We collected manure nutrient data from participating U.S. laboratories and this data was aggregated by researchers at the University of Minnesota into ManureDB, a manure nutrient test database. By February 2024, ManureDB included over 490,000 samples from across the U.S. With ManureDB, data was filtered for the time period from 2012-2022 and common U.S. animal manure categories (solid beef, liquid beef, solid dairy, liquid dairy, solid chicken-broiler, solid chicken-layer, solid turkey, and liquid swine manure) to update nutrient summary statistics for total nitrogen (TN), ammonium-N (NH4-N), phosphorus (P2O5), and potassium (K2O) using the approximately 325,000 samples. Samples were divided by designating samples with <10% total solids as liquid manure and samples with >10% total solids as solid manure. Data was also analyzed to assess regional nutrient comparisons and trends for regions with sufficient samples.
What Have We Learned?
Regional differences impacted nutrient concentrations in solid and liquid manures. When comparing regions with at least 500 samples per animal manure category across 2012-2022 we found significant differences in nutrient concentrations in 66% of the individual year comparisons for solid manures and 91% of comparisons for liquid manures for all four analytes.
Between 2012 and 2022, significant increasing or decreasing nutrient (TN, NH4-N, P2O5, K2O) trends were evident in 25% of solid samples and 18% of liquid samples. The only significant trend for solid beef manure was a decreasing trend in the SE region for NH4-N. Both the solid chicken-broiler SE and NE regions had significant decreases in NH4-N, and only the SE had an increasing trend for K2O. The SE region for solid chicken-layer had decreasing trends for NH4-N, P2O5, and K2O. For solid dairy manure, the MW region only had a decreasing trend for P2O5, while the NE region had decreasing trends for N and NH4-N. Solid turkey manure only had significant trends for P2O5, with the MW increasing and the SE decreasing. Liquid beef manure had no significant trends. For liquid dairy manure, only the NE region had significant decreasing trends for all four nutrients. For liquid swine manure, only the SE region had significant increasing trends for NH4-N.
Standardizing nomenclature and increasing manure sample details, especially with animal life stage and manure storage information on manure sample submittal forms, will further improve ManureDB’s usefulness.
Future Plans
We continue to expand and refine ManureDB by adding data each year, additional labs, making the website more user-friendly, and enhancing data quality control. We archived the first set of data with Ag Data Commons in 2024 and plan to do that annually. We also plan to publish several papers regarding the development of the database and analysis of the manure nutrient data.
Authors
Presenting & corresponding author
Nancy L. Bohl Bormann, Researcher, University of Minnesota, nlbb@umn.edu
Additional authors
Melissa L. Wilson, Associate Professor, University of Minnesota
Erin L. Cortus, Associate Professor and Extension Engineer, University of Minnesota
Additional Information
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- ManureDB website http://manuredb.umn.edu/
- R Code, Data, and Output Supporting: Nutrient Data from U.S. Manure Systems https://doi.org/10.13020/sce9-s034
- Lab websites:
- LPELC Webinar “Upcoming Models & Tools to Improve Manure Management: ManureDB” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwNED9LbtCU
Acknowledgements
ManureDB is supported through USDA NIFA Award 2020-67021-32465 and Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit program [grant no. NR253A750008C001] from the U.S. Department of Agriculture — Natural Resources Conservation Service.
The authors are solely responsible for the content of these proceedings. The technical information does not necessarily reflect the official position of the sponsoring agencies or institutions represented by planning committee members, and inclusion and distribution herein does not constitute an endorsement of views expressed by the same. Printed materials included herein are not refereed publications. Citations should appear as follows. EXAMPLE: Authors. 2025. Title of presentation. Waste to Worth. Boise, ID. April 7–11, 2025. URL of this page. Accessed on: today’s date.

