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Winehole23
02-23-2010, 04:03 PM
New research: synthetic nitrogen destroys soil carbon, undermines soil health (http://www.grist.org/article/2010-02-23-new-research-synthetic-nitrogen-destroys-soil-carbon-undermines-/)




23 Feb 2010 9:47 AM
by Tom Philpott (http://www.grist.org/member/1554)


http://www.grist.org/phpThumb/phpThumb.php?src=http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/dirt_425.jpg&w=307
Just precisely what does all of that nitrogen ferilizer do to the soil?


“Fertilizer is good for the father and bad for the sons.”
—Dutch saying

For all of its ecological baggage, synthetic nitrogen does one good deed for the environment: it helps build carbon in soil. At least, that’s what scientists have assumed for decades.


If that were true, it would count as a major environmental benefit of synthetic N use. At a time of climate chaos and ever-growing global greenhouse gas emissions, anything that helps vast swaths of farmland sponge up carbon would be a stabilizing force. Moreover, carbon-rich soils store nutrients and have the potential to remain fertile over time—a boon for future generations.


The case for synthetic N as a climate stabilizer goes like this. Dousing farm fields with synthetic nitrogen makes plants grow bigger and faster. As plants grow, they pull carbon dioxide from the air. Some of the plant is harvested as crop, but the rest—the residue—stays in the field and ultimately becomes soil. In this way, some of the carbon gobbled up by those N-enhanced plants stays in the ground and out of the atmosphere.
Well, that logic has come under fierce challenge from a team of University of Illinois researchers led by professors Richard Mulvaney, Saeed Khan, and Tim Ellsworth. In two recent papers (see here (http://jeq.scijournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/36/6/1821) and here (http://jeq.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/38/6/2295)) the trio argues that the net effect of synthetic nitrogen use is to reduce soil’s organic matter content. Why? Because, they posit, nitrogen fertilizer stimulates soil microbes, which feast on organic matter. Over time, the impact of this enhanced microbial appetite outweighs the benefits of more crop residues.


And their analysis gets more alarming. Synthetic nitrogen use, they argue, creates a kind of treadmill effect. As organic matter dissipates, soil’s ability to store organic nitrogen declines. A large amount of nitrogen then leeches away, fouling ground water in the form of nitrates, and entering the atmosphere as nitrous oxide (NO2), a greenhouse gas with some 300 times the heat-trapping power of carbon dioxide. In turn, with its ability to store organic nitrogen compromised, only one thing can help heavily fertilized farmland keep cranking out monster yields: more additions of synthetic N.

The loss of organic matter has other ill effects, the researchers say. Injured soil becomes prone to compaction, which makes it vulnerable to runoff and erosion and limits the growth of stabilizing plant roots. Worse yet, soil has a harder time holding water, making it ever more reliant on irrigation. As water becomes scarcer, this consequence of widespread synthetic N use will become more and more challenging.

In short, “the soil is bleeding,” Mulvaney told me in an interview.
If the Illinois team is correct, synthetic nitrogen’s effect on carbon sequestration swings from being an important ecological advantage to perhaps its gravest liability. Not only would nitrogen fertilizer be contributing to climate change in a way not previously taken into account, but it would also be undermining the long-term productivity of the soil.


http://www.grist.org/phpThumb/phpThumb.php?src=http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/mulvaney_team.jpg&w=307Getting their hands dirty: Saeed Khan, Richard Mulvaney, and Tim Ellsworth (l.-r.), in front of the Morrow Plots, University of Illinois.

An Old Idea Germinates Anew

While their research bucks decades of received wisdom, the Illinois researchers know they aren’t breaking new ground here. “The fact is, the message we’re delivering in our papers really is a rediscovery of a message that appeared in the ‘20s and ‘30s,” Mulvaney says. In their latest paper, “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production,” which appeared last year in the Journal of Environmental Quality, the researchers point to two pre-war academic papers that, according to Mulvaney, “state clearly and simply that synthetic nitrogen fertilizers were promoting the loss of soil carbon and organic nitrogen.”

That idea also appears prominently in The Soil and Health (1947), a founding text of modern organic agriculture. In that book, the British agronomist Sir Albert Howard stated the case clearly:
The use of artificial manure, particularly [synthetic nitrogen] ... does untold harm. The presence of additional combined nitrogen in an easily assimilable form stimulates the growth of fungi and other organisms which, in the search for organic matter needed for energy and for building up microbial tissue, use up first the reserve of soil hummus and then the more resistant organic matter which cements soil particles.
In other words, synthetic nitrogen degrades soil.

That conclusion has been current in organic-farming circles since Sir Albert’s time. In an essay in the important 2002 anthology Fatal Harvest Reader, the California organic farmer Jason McKenney puts it like this:
Fertilizer application begins the destruction of soil biodiversity by diminishing the role of nitrogen-fixing bacteria and amplifying the role of everything that feeds on nitrogen. These feeders then speed up the decomposition of organic matter and humus. As organic matter decreases, the physical structure of soil changes. With less pore space and less of their sponge-like qualities, soils are less efficient at storing water and air. More irrigation is needed. Water leeches through soils, draining away nutrients that no longer have an effective substrate on which to cling. With less available oxygen the growth of soil microbiology slows, and the intricate ecosystem of biological exchanges breaks down.
Although those ideas flourished in organic-ag circles, they withered to dust among soil scientists at the big research universities. Mulvaney told me that in his academic training—he holds a PhD in soil fertility and chemistry from the University of Illinois, where he is now a professor in the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences—he was never exposed to the idea that synthetic nitrogen degrades soil. “It was completely overlooked,” he says. “I had never heard of it, personally, until we dug into the literature.”

What sets the Illinois scientists apart from other critics of synthetic nitrogen is their provenance. Sir Albert’s denouncement sits in a dusty old tome that’s pretty obscure even within the organic-agriculture world (http://www.grist.org/article/soil/); Jason McKenney is an organic farmer who operates near Berkeley (http://www.hiddenvilla.org/)—considered la-la land by mainstream soil scientists. Both can be—and, indeed have been—ignored by policymakers and large-scale farmers. By contrast, Mulvaney and his colleagues are living, credentialed scientists working at the premier research university in one of the nation’s most prodigious corn-producing—and nitrogen-consuming—states.


http://www.grist.org/phpThumb/phpThumb.php?src=http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/morrow_plots_sign_425.jpg&w=307

Abandon all hope, all fertilizer execs who enter here.

The Dirt on Nitrogen, Soil, and Carbon
To come to their conclusions, the researchers studied data from the Morrow plots on the University of Illinois’ Urbana-Champaign campus, which comprise the “the world’s oldest experimental site under continuous corn” cultivation. The Morrow plots were first planted in 1876.
Mulvaney and his collaborators analyzed annual soil-test data in test plots that were planted with three crop rotations: continuous corn, corn-soy, and corn-oats-hay. Some of the plots received moderate amounts of fertilizer application; some received high amounts; and some received no fertilizer at all. The crops in question, particularly corn, generate tremendous amounts of residue.

Picture a Midwestern field in high summer, packed with towering corn plants. Only the cobs are harvested; the rest of the plant is left in the field. If synthetic nitrogen use really does promote carbon sequestration, you’d expect these fields to show clear gains in soil organic carbon over time.
Instead, the researchers found, all three systems showed a “net decline occurred in soil [carbon] despite increasingly massive residue [carbon] incorporation.” (They published their findings, “The Myth of Nitrogen Fertilization for Soil Carbon Sequestration,” (http://jeq.scijournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/36/6/1821)in the Journal of Environmental Quality in 2007.) In other words, synthetic nitrogen broke down organic matter faster than plant residue could create it.

A particularly stark set of graphs traces soil organic carbon (SOC) in the surface layer of soil in the Morrow plots from 1904 to 2005. SOC rises steadily over the first several decades, when the fields were fertilized with livestock manure. After 1967, when synthetic nitrogen became the fertilizer of choice, SOC steadily drops.

In their other major paper, “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production” (http://jeq.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/38/6/2295)(2009), the authors looked at nitrogen retention in the soil. Given that the test plots received annual lashings of synthetic nitrogen, conventional ag science would predict a buildup of nitrogen. Sure, some nitrogen would be removed with the harvesting of crops, and some would be lost to runoff. But healthy, fertile soil should be capable of storing nitrogen.

In fact, the researchers found just the opposite. “Instead of accumulating,” they wrote, “soil nitrogen declined significantly in every subplot sampled.” The only explanation, they conclude, is that the loss of organic matter depleted the soil’s ability to store nitrogen. The practice of year-after-year fertilization had pushed the Morrow plots onto the chemical treadmill: unable to efficiently store nitrogen, they became reliant on the next fix.
The researchers found similar data from other test plots. “Such evidence is common in the scientific literature but has seldom been acknowledged, perhaps because N fertilizer practices have been predicated largely on short-term economic gain rather than long-term sustainability,” they write, citing some two dozen other studies which mirrored the patterns of the Morrow plots.

The most recent bit of evidence for the Mulvaney team’s nitrogen thesis comes from a team of researchers at Iowa State University and the USDA. In a 2009 paper (http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/Russell_2009_paper.pdf) (PDF), this group looked at data from two long-term experimental sites in Mollisols, Iowa. And they, too, found that soil carbon had declined after decades of synthetic nitrogen applications. They write: “Increases in decay rates with N fertilization apparently offset gains in carbon inputs to the soil in such a way that soil C sequestration was virtually nil in 78% of the systems studied, despite up to 48 years of N additions.”

http://www.grist.org/phpThumb/phpThumb.php?src=http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/N_morrow_plots.jpg&w=307Fertile ground for research: the Morrow Plots at the University of Illinois.Photo:brianholsclaw (http://www.flickr.com/photos/brianholsclaw/)

Slinging Dirt

Mulvaney and Khan laughed when I asked them what sort of response their work was getting in the soil-science world. “You can bet the fertilizer industry is aware of our work, and they aren’t too pleased,” Mulvaney said. “It’s all about sales, and our conclusions aren’t real good for sales.”

As for the soil-science community, Mulvaney said with a chuckle, “the response is still building.” There has been negative word-of-mouth reaction, he added, but so far, only two responses have been published: a remarkable fact, given that the first paper came out in 2007.

Both published responses fall into the those-data-don’t-say-what-you-say-they category. The first, published as a letter to the editor (http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/reidletter.pdf)(PDF) in the Journal of Environmental Quality, came from D. Keith Reid, a soil fertility specialist with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. Reid writes that the Mulvaney team’s conclusion about synthetic nitrogen and soil carbon is “sensational” and “would be incredibly important if it was true.”

Reid acknowledges the drop in soil organic carbon, but argues that it was caused not by synthetic nitrogen itself, but rather by the difference in composition between manure and synthetic nitrogen. Manure is a mix of slow-release organic nitrogen and organic matter; synthetic nitrogen fertilizer is pure, readily available nitrogen. “It is much more likely that the decline in SOC is due to the change in the form of fertilizer than to the rate of fertilizer applied,” Reid writes.

Then he makes a startling concession:
From the evidence presented in this paper, it would be fair to conclude that modern annual crop management systems are associated with declines in SOC concentrations and that increased residue inputs from high nitrogen applications do not mitigate this decline as much as we might hope.
In other words, modern farming—i.e., the kind practiced on nearly all farmland in the United States—destroys soil carbon. (The Mulvaney team’s response to Reid’s critique can be found in the above-linked document.)
The second second critique (http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/PowlsonreMulvaneypaper.pdf)(PDF) came from a team led by D.S. Powlson at the Department of Soil Science and Centre for Soils and Ecosystem Function at the Rothamsted Research Station in the United Kingdom. Powlson and colleagues attack the Mulvaney team’s contention that synthetic nitrogen depletes the soil’s ability to store nitrogen.

“We propose that the conclusion drawn by Mulvaney et al. (2009), that inorganic N fertilizer causes a decline in soil organic N concentration, is false and not supported by the data from the Morrow Plots or from numerous studies worldwide,” they write.

Then they, too, make a major concession: “the observation of significant soil C and N declines in subsoil layers is interesting and deserves further consideration.” That is, they don’t challenge Mulvaney team’s contention that synthetic nitrogen destroys organic carbon in the subsoil.
In their response (http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/mulvaneyreplypowlson.pdf) (PDF), Mulvaney and his colleagues mount a vigorous defense of their methodology. And then they conclude:
In the modern era of intensified agriculture, soils are generally managed as a commodity to maximize short-term economic gain. Unfortunately, this concept entirely ignores the consequences for a vast array of biotic and abiotic soil processes that aff ect air and water quality and most important, the soil itself.
So who’s right? For now, we know that the Illinois team has presented a robust cache of evidence that turns 50 years of conventional soil science on its head—and an analysis that conventional soil scientists acknowledge is “sensational” and “incredibly important” if true. We also know that their analysis is consistent with the founding principles of organic agriculture: that properly applied manure and nitrogen-fixing cover crops, not synthetic nitrogen, are key to long-term soil health and fertility.

The subject demands more study and fierce debate. But if Mulvaney and his team are correct, the future health of our farmland hinges on a dramatic shift away from reliance on synthetic nitrogen fertilizer.

Wild Cobra
02-23-2010, 06:09 PM
Synthetic Nitrogen?

Who comes up with these terms? Nitrogen is an element. Not something we make synthetically. Now I know what is intended, so don't try to school me on that. I just find the term itself so fucking laughable.

ElNono
02-23-2010, 07:00 PM
Actually the term is 'Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizer'... What's synthetic is the fertilizer (it's inorganic), not the Nitrogen...

BTW, the term has been in use since World War II... maybe even before then...

Wild Cobra
02-23-2010, 07:15 PM
Actually the term is 'Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizer'... What's synthetic is the fertilizer (it's inorganic), not the Nitrogen...

BTW, the term has been in use since World War II... maybe even before then...
Yes, as synthetic FERTILIZER. However, synthetic nitrogen would be a man made isotopic element created from another.

Don't you find it funny that this report isn't any thing new? Know what fallow is? I wonder if this was a government grant to rewrite the same things known for decades, if not centuries.

Anyway, the author of the story knows little to nothing about scientific terminology. That alone raises flags for me.

ElNono
02-23-2010, 07:19 PM
Well, to their credit, the article is about fertilizers...

The first two lines read:

Just precisely what does all of that nitrogen ferilizer do to the soil?

“Fertilizer is good for the father and bad for the sons.”
—Dutch saying

Wild Cobra
02-23-2010, 07:33 PM
Well, to their credit, the article is about fertilizers...

The first two lines read:

Just precisely what does all of that nitrogen ferilizer do to the soil?

“Fertilizer is good for the father and bad for the sons.”
—Dutch saying
Yes, but the problem isn't the fertilizer, but that they can do less crop rotations. Fertilizer alone does not keep the soil healthy.

ElNono
02-23-2010, 07:34 PM
Yes, but the problem isn't the fertilizer, but that they can do less crop rotations. Fertilizer alone does not keep the soil healthy.

I thought you were arguing semantics, not fertilizers...

Wild Cobra
02-23-2010, 07:49 PM
I thought you were arguing semantics, not fertilizers...
Both.

I think it's a silly report.

Winehole23
02-24-2010, 04:13 AM
What's so silly about it, WC?

Winehole23
02-24-2010, 04:16 AM
Yes, but the problem isn't the fertilizer, but that they can do less crop rotations. Fertilizer alone does not keep the soil healthy.Yeah. That was sort of the point of the article. Endless application of high tech fertilizers may not work as well as manure, plus cover crops and crop rotation, from the standpoint of soil and subsoil.

Winehole23
02-24-2010, 04:18 AM
Short term yields aren't everything in the long run.

Wild Cobra
02-24-2010, 04:01 PM
What's so silly about it, WC?
Didn't I explain that?

Old news. Nothing new here. This is all stuff I learned in High School about agriculture, but then I grew up in an area with agricultural diversity from Apple Trees to Wheat.

Winehole23
02-24-2010, 04:04 PM
So then it's silly because you basically agree with it?

Wild Cobra
02-24-2010, 04:32 PM
So then it's silly because you basically agree with it?
No, it's silly because they could have just reprinted a page or two from one of my High School books from more than 30 years ago.

I'll never understand why scientists have to prove the same things over and over.

Wait...

I know...

There education must have been under the newer system. I forgot. I went to school before the Department of Education was created, which effectively dumbed everyone down.

Winehole23
02-24-2010, 04:36 PM
Agree or disagree: empirical evidence from America's oldest ag experiment seems to indicate synthetic N fertilizers may degrade the soil and subsoil over time.

Wild Cobra
02-24-2010, 04:47 PM
Agree or disagree: empirical evidence from America's oldest ag experiment seems to indicate synthetic N fertilizers may degrade the soil and subsoil over time.
No.

It doesn't degrade the soil. It the over use of only added some of the necessary nutrients. The soil is over utilized compared to all the necessary components. They are not all replaced.

Think of it like this. Our bodies need proteins, carbohydrates, vitamins, etc. We have a standardized food chart that suggests so many bread servings, dairy, meats, vegetables, fruits, etc. Now we can live a very long time missing some of the nutrients we need, but our health will degrade faster than if we meet all the nutritional requirements.

Now this probably goes farther than that. Natural land use practices give the land a more varied mix of nutrients, including trace elements that are probably lacking in fertilizers. Then there are the natural enzymes that are lacking in farming practices that rely on man made ingredients.

Then there is over fertilization and pesticides, which will harm or kill necessary things like worms. Fertilizer is not a bad thing. The components are essentially the same as found in nature, and harmless unless used in excess.

Winehole23
02-24-2010, 04:48 PM
Are they used in excess?

Wild Cobra
02-24-2010, 05:02 PM
Are they used in excess?
I think they probably are at times.

I know I killed some grass a couple years back... Oooops...

boutons_deux
02-25-2010, 08:23 AM
Here's a fun article about how healthy chemical farming is.


The Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/) February 25, 2010

Farmers Fighting for Their Health: Taking on Chemical Companies and Transitioning to Sustainable Agriculture

The Ecologist reported recently (http://www.theecologist.org/blogs_and_comments/commentators/other_comments/410498/cancer_and_pesticides_the_legal_floodgates_have_op ened.html) that three French farmers have successfully sued chemical companies for cancer and Parkinson's disease that resulted from their occupational use of pesticides--an issue as widespread as it is under-reported. A cereal farmer with 100,000 hectares of land in in the Vosges region, Dominque Marchal was the first farmer to have his leukemia associated with his daily pesticide use. His wife was determined to get to the bottom of the issue. From the Ecologist:
She employed a lawyer to help her gather the scientific evidence and herself set about gathering invoices and receipts to list which pesticides her husband had been using in previous years. Then, from their own pesticide stocks and with the help of neighbouring farms, she was able to gather samples of each of the potential cancer-causing substances. Her lawyer helped her find a laboratory willing to analyse the contents, and when the results came back they showed that 40 per cent contained benzene, a substance not marked on any of the contents labels but that is known to increase the risk of leukaemia.No farmer has succeeded in taking on Big Chem for their illnesses in the U.S. because it is especially difficult to get medical recognition for the disease-occupation correlation, despite the fact that there is plenty of evidence that exposure to certain pesticides increases the risk of illness. (See Washington University in St. Louis' epidemiological study (http://news.wustl.edu/news/Pages/20150.aspx) that shows high rates of Parkinson's disease in the Midwest and Northeast, where agriculture and metal processing--two occupations that use chemicals associated with Parkinson's--are most prevalent. And the long term Agricultural Health Study (http://aghealth.nci.nih.gov/) focused on Iowa and North Carolina, which began in 1994, has found (http://dceg2.cancer.gov/cgi-bin-pubsearch/pubsearch/index.pl?page=abstract&ID=4870&project=dceg) elevated risk for farmers of multiple myeloma and cancers of the lip, gallbladder, ovary, prostate, and thyroid.)

However, many farmers and rural Americans are taking note of the increasing rate at which their family members and neighbors are diagnosed with cancer and other diseases. Sandra Zellmer, who lost her mother, father and uncle, all farmers, to cancer between 2004-2008, wrote recently (http://www.alternet.org/food/145177/why_commonly_used_pesticides_may_be_to_blame_for_t he_deaths_of_so_many_members_of_my_farming_family/?page=2) about the link between the herbicide atrazine and the pesticide DDT to the types of cancers that killed her family. Her findings echo the blockbuster piece on atrazine in the New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/us/23water.html?_r=2) last summer, which brought attention to the issues posed by heightened exposure to and weak regulation of the weed killer, noting that "Laboratory experiments suggest that when animals are exposed to brief doses of atrazine before birth, they may become more vulnerable to cancer later."

The EPA is currently re-assessing atrazine, which has been found in the drinking water of 33 million Americans. A recent report by the Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) and the Land Stewardship Project entitled The Syngenta Corporation and Atrazine The Cost to the Land, People and Democracy (http://civileats.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/AtrazineReportJan2010.pdf) [pdf] includes the stories of five farmers who've decided to stop using atrazine for health and safety reasons, and also draws attention to the possibility of a link between atrazine and breast cancer. From the report:
Atrazine increases the activity of an enzyme called aromatase that can, in turn, increase levels of estrogen. According to Dr. [Janet] Gray , "This is of great concern when it comes to breast cancer because we know that increased exposures to estrogens are one of the major risk factors for increased incidences of breast cancer."Here is Zellmer's response to these disturbing facts:
[B]No wonder farming is considered one of the most dangerous occupations in the United States. Who knew that farmers' families, their neighbors, and their neighbors' neighbors were at risk, too. If we miss this opportunity to delve deeply into the potential link between a widely used chemical and the health of our food producers and their communities, anger--not acceptance--is the appropriate response.Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, PhD, Senior Scientist at the PANNA (http://www.panna.org/) said that the problem with making these connections is related to the structural failure of our regulatory system:
Farmers, farmworkers and their families have been on the frontlines of pesticide exposure for decades. Parkinson's, asthma, birth defects and childhood cancers are just a few of the diseases farming communities suffer in disproportionate amounts. Each year new studies come out further substantiating the links between exposure and disease. In the U.S. though, these studies have not amounted to policy change because -- unlike in much of Europe -- our legal frameworks for regulating toxic chemicals and pesticides is effectively designed to protect chemical companies over public health. So people continue to get sick and die, while pesticide companies get rich and our public agencies look the other way.

At present, the U.S. system is set up to allow two means of addressing environmental and public health harms: litigation and regulation, and both require levels of proof inadequate to the task of protecting public health. For instance, FIFRA [the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act] & TOSCA [the Toxic Substances Control Act] are the two legal frameworks governing pesticides and toxic chemicals -- both treat chemicals as innocent until proven guilty (it takes decades to 'prove' a chemical guilty). The head of the EPA states flatly that TOSCA is toothless from a regulatory standpoint, and FIFRA makes it nearly impossible to take legal action against a pesticide company or applicator.

What we need is a comprehensive re-orientation of the U.S. government's approach to public health. We can follow Europe's lead here by adopting the "precautionary principle" as a guide.
Many farmers are changing their practices, sparing themselves from routine chemical exposure and thus risk. Mary Howell Martens and her husband Klaas Martens run a 1300-acre organic farm in upstate New York, where they grow corn, beans and grains. Here is what she had to say in an article (http://newfarm.rodaleinstitute.org/features/0802/mary_klaas/mary_klaas.shtml) she wrote about her farm's transition away from chemical agriculture:
...after a long and successful day of spraying, Klaas would invariably come in the house with clothes reeking of pesticide despite the Tyvek suit, his head aching and a queasy stomach. We wanted to believe that it was due to 'just a germ' since he had been working such long hours, but we knew better. My husband was slowly being poisoned.

How do two people so apparently committed to the agribusiness ideal of American farming end up operating over 1300 acres organically just 10 years later? We truly believe that we were like many conventional farmers, using the chemical fertilizers and pesticides simply because we saw no other alternatives, but hating what it might be doing to us, our family, our land, and our environment. We farmed conventionally because we had been told so often that it was the only way to survive in agriculture today.

One evening later that year, we read a small classified advertisement in a regional farm paper looking for organic wheat. Immediately Klaas was on the telephone and we were excited -- was there really a market for organic field crops? We quickly decided that we would leap at this new challenge. If there was a way to grow our crops organically, we were going to figure it out!
In her article, which is geared towards helping other farmers, Martens goes on to describe the changes they had to make in farm management, and how they learned to adapt to new soil fertility and weed control practices.

In order to decrease the risks from routine pesticide exposure in farming, it is going to take both rebuilding rural communities, so that farmers will have new markets and support, along with recognition from policy makers that chemical agriculture has some serious fallout: aside from destroying the productivity of the soil, damaging the environment, and supporting the production of unhealthy food, it is costing human lives.

Originally published on Civil Eats (http://www.civileats.com/)

==============

I'm sure Fox will run with this "farming is poisoning farmers" story with the same unrelenting, investigative vigor they ran with ACORN, terrorist fist bumping, and birth certs.

Actually, it's all a communist Magic Negro conspiracy to take down the Dow, Monsanto, and friends, and "take over" farming in The Greatest Country In The World.

Wild Cobra
02-25-2010, 11:38 AM
Hmmm...

Suing a chemical company because known hazardous chemicals, likely clearly marked, have obviously been misused.

Let's just shoot all the trial lawyers and return to a civilized society.

Oh...

We were talking about fertilizers. Not pesticides.

boutons_deux
02-25-2010, 02:42 PM
The entire AgriBusiness model of saturating the soil and plants with herbicides ("round-up ready"), pesticides, fertilizers is not sustainable.

But get back to your narrow concern about fertilizers, as if they were separable from the industrial farming model.