RT Journal T1 INFLUENCE OF COMPOSTING AND POULTRY LITTER STORAGE METHODS ON MINERALIZATION AND NUTRIENT DYNAMICS A1 A. N. Chaudhry A1 M. A. Naeem A1 G. Jilani A1 A. Razzaq A1 Dong-mei Zhang A1 M. Azeem A1 M. Ahmed JF Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences JO JAPS SN 1018-7081 VO 23 IS 2 SP 500 OP 506 YR 2013 FD 2013/04/01 DO DOI NA AB

Poultry litter poses serious environmental threats and health hazards while composting offers the convenient and acceptable means of its recycling. This study was carried out by considering the importance of proper storage and composting of poultry litter (PL) for its nutrient conservation and stability. Five storage methods were compared for their effects on nutrient dynamics in PL under composting and un-composting conditions. Storage methods included: shed, covered (plastic sheet), open-air, pit, and lined floor. The pile / pit size was 2 m × 2 m × 1 m (L × W × H or D), and the quantity of poultry litter in each one was 500 kg. Composite PL samples were collected after an interval of 15 days until 90 days for the determination of organic C, macro- (N, P and K) contents. The results depicted significant successive reduction of organic C contents / C:N ratio and improvement in macro- and micro-nutrient concentration in the processed PL with increased storage time both under composting and un-composting conditions. Among the storage methods, PL composted under plastic cover resulted to highest nutrient contents and the lowest C:N ratio; while shed storage without composting gave the poorest results. Finally, the lowest values of C:N were found under in-pit and linedfloor storage which differed significantly from under-shed storage with maximum value. Therefore from this study it is concluded that composting of poultry litter along with plastic sheet cover provides the best storage condition to conserve nutrients.

K1 C:N ratio, decomposition, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium PB Pakistan Agricultural Scientists Forum LK https://thejaps.org.pk/AbstractView.aspx?mid=2013-JAPS-228