Article

The relationship between milk production and farm-gate nitrogen surplus for the Waikato region, New Zealand.

DairyNZ Ltd., Private Bag 3221, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
Journal of Environmental Management (impact factor: 3.24). 01/2012; 93(1):44-51. DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2011.08.013
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT As the scope and scale of New Zealand (NZ) dairy farming increases, farmers and the industry are being challenged by Government and the New Zealand public to address growing environmental concerns. Dairying has come under increasing scrutiny from local authorities tasked with sustainable resource management. Despite recent efforts of farmers and industry to improve resource use efficiency, there is increasing likelihood of further regulatory constraints on water use and nutrient management. This study uses available data on farm-gate nitrogen (N) surpluses and milk production from the Waikato, New Zealand's largest dairying region, together with a farm scale modeling exercise, to provide a perspective on the current situation compared to dairy farms in Europe. It also aims to provide relevant guidelines for N surpluses and efficiencies under NZ conditions. Waikato dairy farms compare favorably with farms in Europe in terms of N use efficiency expressed as L milk/kg farm-gate N surplus. Achievable and realistic good practice objectives for Waikato dairy farmers could be 15,000 L milk/ha (1200 kg milk fat plus protein/ha) with a farm-gate N surplus of 100 kg/ha giving an eco-efficiency (L milk/kg N surplus) of 150, and long-term average nitrate leaching losses of approximately 25-30 kg/ha/yr. This can be achieved by increasing the N conversion efficiency through lower replacement rates (16 versus 22%), lower stocked (< 3 cows/ha) high genetic merit cows (30 L milk/day at peak) milked for longer (277 versus 240 days), feeding effluent-irrigated, home-grown, low-protein supplements to cows on high-protein, grass-clover pastures to dilute N concentration in the diet, removing some of the urinary N from the paddocks during critical times by standing cows on a loafing pad for part of the day, and through lower N fertilizer rates (50-70 kg/ha/yr compared to the norm of 170-200 kg/ha/yr) and using a nitrification inhibitor and gibberellins to boost pasture growth and the former to reduce N leaching.

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Keywords

dairy farms
 
environmental concerns
 
farm scale modeling exercise
 
farm-gate N surplus
 
loafing pad
 
local authorities tasked
 
long-term average nitrate leaching losses
 
lower replacement rates
 
milk production
 
N conversion efficiency
 
N surpluses
 
N use efficiency
 
New Zealand public
 
New Zealand's largest dairying region
 
pasture growth
 
recent efforts
 
resource use efficiency
 
sustainable resource management
 
Waikato dairy farmers
 
Waikato dairy farms
 

P C Beukes