4 Va. Admin. Code § 5-15-150 - Required nutrient management plan procedures
A. Nutrient application.
1. A certified nutrient management planner
shall include, in each plan, nutrient application practices for each field in
the plan. The nutrient application rates shall be calculated for nitrogen (N),
phosphate (P2O5), and potash
(K2O). Individual field recommendations shall be made
after considering nutrients contained in fertilizers, manure, biosolids,
industrial wastes, legumes in the crop rotation, crop residues, residual
nutrients, and all other sources of nutrients. Individual fields may be grouped
together if similar soil productivity levels, soil fertility levels, and
environmentally sensitive site features exist.
2. Nutrient application rates.
a. Determination of crop nutrient needs shall
be consistent with tables and procedures contained in Virginia Nutrient
Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014 and the Commercial
Vegetable Production Recommendations, 2005 (Virginia Cooperative Extension
Publication 456-420), and shall be based on soil test results for
P2O5 and
K2O.
b.
Nitrogen applications rates in nutrient management plans shall not exceed crop
nutrient needs in subdivision 2 a of this subsection.
c. Phosphorus application rates shall be
managed to minimize adverse water quality impacts consistent with subdivisions
2 c (1) through (5) of this subsection.
(1)
Phosphorus applications from inorganic nutrient sources shall not exceed crop
nutrient needs over the crop rotation based on a soil test.
(2) Phosphorus applications shall not be
included in nutrient management plans developed after December 31, 2005, for
soils exceeding 65% phosphorus saturation levels as listed in Virginia Nutrient
Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, regardless of the outcome
of other procedures specified in this subsection except as allowed in
subdivision 2 c (4) of this subsection.
(3) Whenever possible, phosphorus
applications from organic nutrient sources should not exceed crop needs based
on a soil test over the duration of the crop rotation. If this is not possible,
maximum phosphorus application rates and phosphorus control practices contained
in nutrient management plans shall be consistent with the phosphorus management
provisions contained in Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria,
revised July 2014 except as allowed in subdivision 2 c (4) of this
subsection.
(4) Fields controlled
by existing operations that receive phosphorus applications only from on-farm
or on-site generated liquid dairy manure, liquid swine manure, or liquid sewage
sludge shall be limited to a maximum of crop removal amounts of applied
phosphorus until December 31, 2010, if the field exceeds 65% phosphorus
saturation levels or has a phosphorus index rating that exceeds 100. New
operations that begin production after December 31, 2005, or operations that
expand after December 31, 2005, by increasing the total phosphorus generated in
liquid dairy manure, liquid swine manure or liquid sewage sludge by more than
10% shall not be considered existing operations.
(5) A single phosphorus application may be
recommended to address multiple crops in the crop rotation identified within
the timeframe covered by the nutrient management plan consistent with
4VAC5-15-150 D 1
if the single application does not exceed the sum of the appropriate
application rates for individual crops as determined by subdivisions 2 c (1)
through (3) of this subsection.
d. Recommended application rates for
secondary nutrients and micronutrients should be at agronomically or
economically justifiable levels for expected crop production. Potassium
applications sufficient to meet crop nutrient needs shall be included in
nutrient management plans for all fields consistent with recommendations
contained in Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July
2014.
e. Expected crop yield shall
be determined from any of the following methods on a given field:
(1) Soil productivity group expected crop
yields based on and consistent with soil productivity information contained in
Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July
2014;
(2) The farmer's past
experience with crop yields in specific fields may be used to make reasonable
adjustments to expected crop yields in subdivision 2 e (1) of this subsection
in lieu of verifiable yield records provided the upward adjustments impact no
more than 20% of the acreage of any crop on a particular farm; or
(3) Verifiable past crop yields are utilized
to determined expected crop yield. The calculation of expected crop yield shall
be an average of the three highest yielding years taken from the last five
years the particular crop was grown in the specific field.
f. Representative soil analysis results for
fields shall be determined by using standard soil sampling and analysis methods
according to Methods of Soil Analysis, Part 3, Chemical Methods, 1996 utilizing
the Mehlich I extraction procedure for phosphorus or other methods and
laboratories approved by the department and correlated to Mehlich I and
utilizing correlation procedures contained in Virginia Nutrient Management
Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014. Soil analysis results shall be dated
no more than three years prior to the beginning date of the nutrient management
plan. A single composite soil sample should represent an area up to
approximately 20 acres. Fields such as those common to strip cropping may be
combined when soils, previous cropping history, and soil fertility are similar.
Representative soil sample cores shall be obtained from the soil surface to a
depth of four inches (0-4") for fields that have not been tilled within the
past three years, and from the soil surface to a depth of six inches (0-6") for
fields which are tilled or have been tilled within the past three years. Soil
sampling of fields based on subfield grids or management zones may be
utilized.
g. For existing
operations, the most recent organic nutrient source analysis results or an
average of past nutrient analysis results for the specific operation within the
last three-year period shall be used to determine the nutrient content of
organic nutrient sources. Manure analyses shall include percent moisture, total
nitrogen or total Kjeldahl nitrogen, ammonium nitrogen, total phosphorus, and
total potassium determined using laboratory methods consistent with Recommended
Methods of Manure Analysis, publication A3769, University of Wisconsin, 2003 or
other methods approved by the department. For plans on new animal waste
facilities, average analyses published in Virginia Nutrient Management
Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, should be utilized unless proposed
manure storage and treatment conditions warrant the use of alternative data.
Plant available nutrient content shall be determined using the mineralization
rates and availability coefficients found in Virginia Nutrient Management
Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, for different forms and sources of
organic nutrients. Mineralization of organic nutrients from previous
applications shall be accounted for in the plan.
h. The expected nitrogen contributions from
legumes shall be credited when determining nutrient application rates at levels
listed in Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July
2014.
3. Soil pH
influences nutrient availability and crop nutrient utilization and should be
adjusted to the level suited for the crop. Nutrient management plans shall
contain lime recommendations to adjust soil pH to a level within the
appropriate agronomic range for the existing crop or crop(s) to be grown.
Recommendations shall address lime application if soil pH is below the optimal
range. Nutrient management planners shall not recommend the application of
lime, lime-amended materials, or nutrient sources that are expected to raise
the soil pH to a level that exceeds the appropriate agronomic range for the
growing crop or crop(s) to be grown based on recommendations contained in
Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July
2014.
4. Nutrient application
timing.
a. Timing recommendations for
nutrient sources containing nitrogen shall be as close to plant nutrient uptake
periods as reasonably possible. A certified nutrient management planner shall
utilize procedures contained in Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and
Criteria, revised July 2014, to determine the timing of nutrient applications.
To reduce the potential for nutrient leaching or runoff, a certified nutrient
management planner shall recommend applications of nitrogen-containing
materials only to sites where an actively growing crop is in place at the time
of application or where a timely planted crop will be established within 30
days of the planned nutrient application, except as specified in subdivisions 4
b through e of this subsection. If such nutrient applications are made to
fall-seeded crops such as small grain, the crop planted shall be capable of
germination and significant growth before the onset of winter so the crop is
able to take up the available applied nitrogen.
b. Organic nutrient source applications may
be applied at differing times than specified in subdivision 4 a of this
subsection in order to manage storage constraints in accordance with the
following conditions:
(1) Applications of
organic nutrient sources shall be within 60 days of planting a spring seeded
crop to sites that are not environmentally sensitive sites as identified in
4VAC5-15-10 or the Virginia
Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, except as
specified in subdivision 4 b (2) of this subsection. Such nutrient applications
shall not exceed allowable application rates of the spring seeded
crop;
(2) Applications shall be
within 90 days of planting a spring seeded crop to sites that meet all of the
following requirements:
(a) Are not
environmentally sensitive sites as identified in
4VAC5-15-10 or the Virginia
Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014;
(b) Have slopes of less than 7.0% throughout
the application area unless:
(i) at least 60%
uniformly distributed crop residue cover exists following application or
(ii) the application and any
associated tillage is in conformance with an existing and implemented soil
conservation plan meeting NRCS requirements for the site; and
(c) The organic sources being
applied are one of the following: semi-solid beef manure, semi-solid dairy
manure with sawdust bedding or straw bedding, dewatered anaerobically digested
sewage sludge, or dewatered lime stabilized sewage sludge. Such nutrient
applications shall not exceed allowable application rates of the spring planted
crop;
(3) Applications
of organic nutrient sources may occur prior to the times specified in
subdivisions 4 b (1) and (2) of this subsection on:
(a) Sites that are not environmentally
sensitive sites if all of the following requirements are met:
(i) a trap crop exists that has reached a
Zadoks growth stage of 23 or greater having a uniform stand throughout the site
area of at least 20 plants per square foot;
(ii) the trap crop shall be allowed to
continue growing on the entire site until within two weeks of the spring crop
planting date;
(iii) all such
nitrogen applications of organic nutrient sources to trap crops shall not
exceed the crop nutrient needs of the upcoming spring planted crop subtracting
at least 30 pounds per acre of nitrogen to be reserved for use as a banded
starter fertilizer at the time of spring planting; and
(iv) the rate of organic nutrient source
applied does not smother the crop.
(b) Environmentally sensitive sites as
identified in
4VAC5-15-10 or the Virginia
Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, in addition to
those criteria outlined in subdivision 4 b (3) (a) of this subsection, such
applications to a trap crop must be within 60 days of planting a spring planted
crop.
c. The
nutrient timing requirements of subdivisions 4 a and b of this subsection for
application of sewage sludge to nonenvironmentally sensitive sites in nutrient
management plans shall not be effective until January 1, 2009. The delayed
implementation time is provided to allow for the development of adequate winter
storage capacity, landfilling, or alternative uses. All applications of sewage
sludge to environmentally sensitive sites in nutrient management plans will
fully comply with the requirements of subdivisions 4 a and b of this subsection
by January 11, 2006.
d. Composted
organic nutrient sources having a final carbon to nitrogen ratio of 20:1 or
greater are exempt from requirements of subdivisions 4 a and b of this
subsection if analyzed for carbon to nitrogen ratio at the conclusion of the
composting process and results are obtained prior to land application. The
planner shall recommend soil nitrate testing to determine nitrogen application
rates during the growing season following the application of composted organic
nutrient sources.
e. The nutrient
management planner shall recommend split application of inorganic nitrogen
fertilizers as starter or broadcast and sidedressing or top dressing in row
crops and small grains consistent with procedures contained in Virginia
Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, on
environmentally sensitive sites as identified in
4VAC5-15-10. Split applications of
inorganic nitrogen fertilizers and irrigation scheduling shall be recommended
for crops to receive irrigation. The use of a pre-sidedress nitrogen test
(PSNT) can help to determine nitrogen needs during the growing period. In lieu
of split applications, the planner may recommend the application of the total
nitrogen requirement for spring-planted row crops within one week prior to
planting if at least 50% of the plant available nitrogen requirement of the
crop is supplied with slowly available nitrogen sources.
f. Nutrient management plans shall include a
statement indicating that applications of inorganic nutrient sources, liquid
manure, liquid sewage sludge, or liquid industrial waste are not to occur on
frozen or snow-covered ground. When ground is frozen, dry or semi-solid
manures, dewatered sludges, or dewatered industrial wastes may only be applied
if the field has:
(i) slopes not greater than
6.0%;
(ii) 60% uniform ground
cover from crop residue or an existing actively growing crop such as a small
grain or fescue with exposed plant height of three inches or more;
(iii) a minimum of a 200-foot vegetated or
adequate crop residue buffer between the application area and all surface water
courses; and
(iv) soils
characterized by USDA as "well drained."
5. Application method for nutrients.
a. The application of nitrogen containing
materials shall be managed to minimize runoff, leaching and volatilization
losses.
b. Applications of liquid
manures or sludges utilizing irrigation shall not be recommended to be applied
at hydraulic rates above those contained in Virginia Nutrient Management
Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014.
c. Plans shall not recommend liquid manure or
sludge application rates utilizing nonirrigation liquid spreading equipment
which exceed 14,000 gallons per acre (approximately one-half (0.5) inch) per
application. The amount of liquid manure or sludge application in plans will
not exceed the hydraulic loading capacity of the soil at the time of each
application. If a subsequent pass across a field is necessary to achieve the
desired application rate, the plan will allow for sufficient drying
time.
d. Where possible, the
planner should recommend that biosolids, industrial wastes and manures be
incorporated or injected in the crop root zone in order to reduce losses of
nitrogen to the atmosphere and to increase the plant available nitrogen to
phosphorus ratio of these nutrient sources relative to crop nutrient needs.
Lime stabilized biosolids should not be injected due to the creation of a
localized band of high soil pH unless subsequent practices are utilized, such
as disking, in order to adequately mix the soil.
e. The planner shall recommend setbacks
around wells, springs, surface waters, sinkholes, and rock outcrops where
manure, biosolids, or industrial waste should not be applied. Such setbacks
recommended shall be consistent with criteria contained in Virginia Nutrient
Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014, unless alternative
setbacks or buffers are specified in regulations or permits pertaining to the
site. For sites impacted by other regulations or permits, the planner shall
include the setbacks and buffers specified in regulations promulgated under
§
32.1-164.5 of the Code of
Virginia for sewage sludge, §
62.1-44.17:1 of the Code of
Virginia for animal waste, §
62.1-44.17:1.1 of the Code of
Virginia for poultry waste, and Chapter 21 (§
10.1-2100 et seq.) of Title 10.1
of the Code of Virginia for sites in Chesapeake Bay Preservation areas, and
permits for industrial waste land application. The land area within setback and
buffer areas shall be deducted from field acreage to determine usable field
acreage for nutrient application in nutrient management plans.
B. Manure production
and utilization.
1. The planner shall estimate
the annual manure quantity produced on each farm utilizing tables and forms
contained in Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria, revised July
2014, or from actual farm records of manure pumped or hauled during a
representative 12-month period.
2.
The nutrient management plan shall state the total amount of manure produced
and the amount that can be used on the farm, utilizing the information and
methods provided in the Virginia Nutrient Management Standards and Criteria,
revised July 2014. The plan shall discuss any excess manure and shall provide
recommendations concerning options for the proper use of such excess
manure.
C. Plans shall
identify and address the protection from nutrient pollution of environmentally
sensitive sites.
D. Plan
maintenance and revisions.
1. A site-specific
nutrient management plan developed in accordance with all requirements of these
regulations, including specified crops or crop rotations, shall provide
information on soil fertility and seasonal application of required nutrients
for one to five years of crop production. Plans developed for a period of time
greater than three years and up to five years shall be limited to sites in
permanent pasture or continuous hay.
2. The plan shall state a need for immediate
modification if (i) animal numbers are to increase above the level specified in
the plan, (ii) animal types including intended market weights are to be
changed, (iii) additional imported manure, biosolids, or industrial waste that
was not identified in the existing plan is to be applied to fields under the
control of the operator, or (iv) available land area for the utilization of
manure decreases below the level necessary to utilize manure in the plan. The
plan shall also state a need for modification prior to subsequent nutrient
applications if cropping systems, rotations, or fields are changed and
phosphorus will be applied at levels greater than crop nutrient needs based on
soil analysis as determined from procedures in Virginia Nutrient Management
Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014.
3. Adjustments to manure production and
application should be made if there are increases in animal numbers or changes
in how animal waste is stored or applied, or when there are changes in nutrient
content of manure resulting from changing feed rations, animal types, or new
sampling and analysis for nutrient content and application rate
calculations.
4. Soil analysis
shall be recommended for each field at least once every three years to
determine the soil fertility and pH, and to update the nutrient management
plan.
5. Manure analysis shall be
recommended before field application until a baseline nutrient content is
established for the specific manure type on the corresponding farm operation.
After a baseline nutrient content is established, a manure analysis shall be
recommended at least once every three years for dry or semisolid manures, and
at least once every year for liquid manures.
6. Modified top dressing or sidedressing
application rates of nitrogen may be recommended if a pre-sidedress nitrogen
test (PSNT) administered during the growing season indicates different levels
of nitrogen than planning time calculations if the use of the PSNT and
interpretation of the test results are consistent with Virginia Nutrient
Management Standards and Criteria, revised July 2014.
Notes
Statutory Authority: § 10.1-104.2:1 of the Code of Virginia.
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