4 Va. Admin. Code § 5-15-140 - Nutrient management plan content
A. A certified nutrient management planner
shall prepare nutrient management plans which contain the information in
subsections B through G of this section. For nutrient management plans covering
nonagricultural, specialty land uses, for example residential lawns, office
parks, and golf courses, the department may specify additional plan elements
which are critical to the management of nutrients for a particular activity,
and may eliminate requirements not pertinent to nonagricultural land
uses.
B. Plan identification. Each
plan shall be identified by a single cover sheet indicating:
1. Farmer/operator name and
address;
2. Name, certificate
number, and signature of the certified nutrient management planner that
prepared the plan;
3. County and
watershed code of land under the nutrient management plan;
4. Total acreage under the plan with double
cropped acreage accounted for only once;
5. Acreage of cropland, hay, pasture, and
specialty crops included in the plan for the first year of the plan;
6. Date the plan was prepared or revised;
and
7. Type and approximate number
of livestock, if applicable.
C. Map or aerial photograph.
1. Each plan shall contain a map or aerial
photograph to identify:
a. The farm location
and boundaries;
b. Individual field
boundaries where nutrients will be applied;
c. Field numbers and acreages where nutrients
will be applied;
d. Environmentally
sensitive sites as defined in
4VAC5-15-10;
e. Setback areas for nonapplication for
manure and biosolids as specified in
4VAC5-15-150 A 5
e;
f. Location of manure,
biosolids, or waste storage if any; and
g. Intermittent or perennial streams and
associated buffers (if the phosphorus index is used to determine phosphorus
application rates for specific fields).
2. The map or aerial photograph shall be
legible, with the features in subdivision 1 of this subsection recognizable. A
farm sketch or soil survey map may be used when a map or aerial photograph is
not available, if the features described in subdivision 1 of this subsection
are recognizable.
D.
Summary of nutrient management plan recommendations. Each plan shall contain
one or more summary sheets that list the following information for each field:
1. Name of the farmer/operator;
2. Field identification numbers to include
the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency tract and field
numbers;
3. Field
acreages;
4. Expected crops or crop
rotations;
5. Crop nutrient needs
per acre based on soil analysis results and soil productivity;
6. Legume nitrogen credits per
acre;
7. Available nutrients in
soil from previous crop and mineralization of organic residuals;
8. Recommended organic nutrient source
application rates in tons per acre or 1,000 gallons per acre; plant available
nitrogen as N, phosphorus as
P2O5, and potassium as
K2O per acre; and spreading schedule to include
approximate months of application;
9. Expected time of incorporation of organic
nutrient sources into the soil if organic nutrient sources will be
used;
10. Commercial fertilizer
rates and timing of applications, including split applications of nitrogen and
the possible use of soil nitrogen test results on a field before sidedressing
with nitrogen; and
11. Numerical
phosphorus and potassium soil analysis results expressed as ppm P and K, pounds
per acre P and K or pounds per acre
P2O5 and
K2O for all fields in the plan.
E. Individual fields may be grouped together
if similar soil productivity levels, soil fertility levels, and environmentally
sensitive site features exist pertaining to subsection D of this
section.
F. Each plan shall also
contain the following information in summary or narrative form:
1. Identification and management of
environmentally sensitive sites;
2.
Quantities of manure produced on the farm, available manure storage capacity,
and manure analysis;
3. Total
manure used as crop nutrients, if any, including manure from both on farm and
off farm sources based on plan recommendations and total land requirements for
manure utilization;
4. Quantity of
unused manure, if applicable, and recommendations on appropriate use
options;
5. Liming recommendations
if soil pH is below the optimal range or to raise soil pH to no more than the
upper limit for lime stabilized sewage sludge;
6. Recommendations or fact sheets to ensure
efficient application of fertilizers and organic nutrient sources and other
best management practices to reduce the potential for the degradation of
surface and groundwater quality, which may include but are not limited to:
a. Equipment calibration;
b. Application timing and method;
c. Crop rotation and agronomic
practices;
d. Soil nitrate testing;
and
e. Cover crop
management;
7.
Information on maintaining and updating a nutrient management plan. General
comments about plan maintenance shall include:
a. The length of time the plan is effective
consistent with
4VAC5-15-150 D 1;
and
b. Identification of
circumstances or changes in the farm operation such as an increase in animal
numbers that would require the plan to be updated prior to the time specified
in this subdivision 7;
8. Expected crop yields for each field for
the planned crop rotation;
9. The
following information for all fields where the phosphorus applications are
based on the phosphorus index:
a. Functioning
riparian buffer widths and distances to surface waters in feet;
b. Presence of any contour planting at a
maximum of 1.0% row grade, strip cropping, conservation tillage with greater
than 30% residue, or terraces;
c.
Percentage of required ground cover on pastures stated as <50% cover, 50-75%
cover, or >75% cover;
d. Crop
tillage type for each crop stated as either no-till or tilled for all cropland;
and
e. If expected soil erosion for
the phosphorus index was developed using RUSLE2, a copy of the RUSLE2 Profile
Erosion Calculation Record computerized print-out indicating:
(i) crop(s) for each year in the crop
rotation to match those identified in the nutrient management plan,
(ii) all mechanical field operations, and
(iii) edge of field soil loss for
each field; and
10. Other notes as needed pertaining to
nutrient application, tillage, and other special conditions.
G. The nutrient management planner
shall incorporate additional more restrictive plan requirements if required by
other specific legislative, regulatory or incentive programs which apply to a
specific operator.
Notes
Statutory Authority
§ 10.1-104.2 of the Code of Virginia.
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