Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ag division aims to help keep poultry industry strong in ’22

- By John Lovett Special to The Commercial

The University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e supports several initiative­s to ensure the state’s poultry industry continues to grow with a forward-looking focus on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and animal well-being, according to a news release.

Poultry is the No. 1 agricultur­al commodity for Arkansas with broiler production accounting for a majority of the $3.7 billion in poultry cash receipts in 2020. It amounts to about half of the state’s total agricultur­e cash receipts, according to The Poultry Federation.

Arkansas is the No. 3 broiler producer in the nation and the segment supports over 151,000 jobs in the state, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e reported in April 2021. More than 6,500 farms produce some type of poultry in Arkansas, and broilers remain the most-produced commodity with about 1 billion broilers grown annually, The Poultry Federation says.

The past year’s poultry production is expected to provide a “bump” to the state’s overall agricultur­e-based income, according to James Mitchell, assistant professor and livestock economist.

“Modest year-over-year growth in broiler production should translate into a bit of a bump in the state’s 2021 farm income compared to 2020,” Mitchell writes in the Fryar Risk Management Center of Excellence 2021 Markets in Review.

The center is a part of the Department of Agricultur­al Economics and Agribusine­ss at the University of Arkansas.

The USDA forecasts a slight increase in poultry production nationally in 2022 with broilers expected to increase by about 1 percent and turkeys by about 1.6 percent. The state produces about 31 million turkeys annually, ranking it No. 2 in the nation for gobbler growth, according to The Poultry Federation.

The Natural State is no spring chicken when it comes to eggs either. Arkansas is ranked No. 4 in the nation in egg production value, producing about 3.8 billion eggs annually.

FOCUS ON SUSTAINABI­LITY

Researcher­s with the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station, the research arm of the Division of Agricultur­e, have focused on sustainabi­lity in recent years, especially water conservati­on.

“Water has been at the forefront of our thoughts on sustainabi­lity,” said David Caldwell, head of the poultry science department and the Center of Excellence for Poultry Science within the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e. “We are all well aware of how precious a commodity water is, and it takes water to grow and process chickens, turkeys and eggs. We have a huge focus on water quantity and water efficiency.”

For example, researcher­s at the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station continued decades of research in 2021 as part of a nearly $10 million U.S. Department of Agricultur­e National Institute of Food and Agricultur­e grant awarded to Walter Bottje, experiment station poultry science physiologi­st, in

2019 titled, “Empowering U.S. Broiler Production for Transforma­tion and Sustainabi­lity.”

Work in 2021 focused on fine-tuning a method of direct-cooling chickens with low-pressure sprinklers in tandem with traditiona­l coolcell pad systems and ventilatio­n fans. Previous studies at the Applied Broiler Research Unit at the Savoy Research Complex in Northwest Arkansas showed sprinkler cooling systems used on average 67 percent less cooling water than the cool-cell pad systems.

Yi Liang, associate professor of biological and agricultur­al engineerin­g and faculty with the Center of Excellence for Poultry Science, pointed out that the studies have also shown that chicken sprinklers resulted in slightly better feed conversion ratios without affecting poultry litter quality.

Sara Orlowski, assistant professor of poultry science, has also been working through a USDA grant to identify and select broilers for water efficiency, Caldwell said.

Attention to the poultry industry as the source of excess nutrient runoff in watersheds has led to a variety of mitigation tactics, including the shipment of poultry litter to out-of-state buyers. But one of the studies at the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station is leading the effort in the

developmen­t of a liquid-state poultry litter digester that turns chicken litter into both biogas and a dry, stable fertilizer called struvite. Most of the water used in the anaerobic digestion process is recycled to the first phase of the machine.

Two other universiti­es — the University of Idaho and Virginia Tech University — are working with the experiment station on the threepiece system that is funded by USDA/NIFA/AFRI Foundation­al and Applied Science Program. Poultry production in Arkansas generates about 1.3 million metric tons of litter a year, most of it being concentrat­ed in the northwest region of the state, according to the Center for Agricultur­al and Rural Sustainabi­lity (CARS).

“Our part is to treat poultry litter using anaerobic digestion,

which produces an effluent containing increased magnesium ions that can be used for struvite production in the next step,” explains Jun Zhu, director of the CARS, and professor of biological and agricultur­al engineerin­g for the Division of Agricultur­e.

By the end of 2022, the two other pieces of the system are expected to be delivered to the experiment station to complete the system for further testing. The team from Idaho is making the device that creates struvite. The Virginia Tech team is developing the water recovery system. Zhu expects an upscaled system to be used at an experiment station broiler house for further tests. To his knowledge, this is the only system under developmen­t that creates biogas and struvite from liquid-state

poultry litter digestion in the nation.

Caldwell said the Division of Agricultur­e is also taking a role of leadership in the promotion and advancemen­t of solar energy as a renewable energy source.

“Arkansas has very favorable regulation­s for solar in terms of how it integrates with the electrical grid,” Caldwell said. “It’s a good thing for producers to be considerin­g right now.”

The Division of Agricultur­e also supports the poultry industry’s efforts to further establish animal well-being practices.

“Companies are very mindful of how poultry is being grown, transporte­d, and processed, and while there may be variations company by company, animal welfare and well-being, just like sustainabi­lity, is ultra-important to the industry now,” Caldwell said. “All integrator­s we work with currently are operating under stringent animal welfare and sustainabi­lity goals or guidelines.”

A new director for the Center for Food Animal Well-Being is expected to arrive in January to continue the Division of Agricultur­e’s animal well-being program.

To learn more about the Division of Agricultur­e, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow the agency on Twitter at @AgInArk.

 ?? (Special to The Commercial/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e/Fred Miller) ?? Assistant professor Samuel Rochell conducts research on poultry health in 2019.
(Special to The Commercial/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e/Fred Miller) Assistant professor Samuel Rochell conducts research on poultry health in 2019.

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