1. Introduction
Horses produce a considerable amount of manure. An average-sized 500-kg horse produces approximately 22.7 kg of manure per day [
1]. With the addition of bedding material, the total waste generated from a single horse can accumulate to over 9400 kg per year [
2,
3]. Composting is a beneficial management practice that can reduce the volume of manure, reduce pathogen load, improve the stability of the nutrients, and produce a value-added material [
4].
In a survey of New Jersey horse farms, 47% of respondents reported composting their horse manure, although best management practices for composting were not recorded [
5]. Without proper management of compost piles, nutrients have the potential to leach from the pile and contribute to environmental issues, such as eutrophication.
Most of the mineral leaching research using equine-sourced compost has mainly focused on N, P, and K. One study reported that during a single rain storm, between 28 and 93 mg P/kg ran off from uncovered equine manure compost piles [
2]. Over the course of the entire composting process involving multiple rain events, approximately 69% of initial P had disappeared from the compost pile [
2]. In another experiment using equine straw-based compost, 7% of the initial P and 6% of the initial N leached during one simulated rainfall event [
6].
While N, P, and K are important to consider in composting systems from an environmental standpoint, trace minerals should also be considered. When applied to the land, compost can provide beneficial minerals to support plant growth [
7]. However, if manure or compost is applied in excess of plant uptake, these minerals can accumulate in the soil or leach to nearby waterways [
8]. In large enough concentrations, trace minerals, such as Co, Cu, Mn, and Zn, can be toxic to plants, microorganisms, and aquatic organisms [
9,
10,
11].
Horses are often supplemented trace minerals in amounts that exceed their requirements, leading to increased fecal excretion [
12]. In other species, many authors have investigated the mobility of trace minerals, particularly Cu and Zn, from compost [
13,
14,
15]. To the authors’ knowledge, there have been no studies examining the mobility of trace minerals in equine-sourced compost. A better understanding of the mobility of trace minerals in equine compost is necessary for quantifying the environmental risks associated with storing and applying equine compost to land.
The effect of the horse’s diet on compost quality and characteristics has received little attention. In general, there is a positive linear relationship between dietary mineral intake and fecal excretion [
16]. Thus, the more mineral fed to a horse, the greater the concentration in the feces, and subsequently in the compost. In addition to the amount of mineral available for leaching, the form of the mineral in the compost dictates how readily available that mineral is for leaching, run-off, or plant uptake potential [
13]. Horses are typically supplemented trace minerals in organic or inorganic form, which are believed to have different bioavailabilities to the horse [
17]. However, it is unknown how these dietary mineral forms will behave in compost.
The objective of this study was to quantify mineral content and leaching potential of compost created from the feces of horses fed different amounts, and forms (organic and inorganic), of trace minerals. We hypothesized that feeding more trace minerals would increase compost mineral concentration and increase the amount of mineral that leached from the compost. Our second hypothesis was that the form of the added dietary trace minerals would impact the leaching potential of those minerals.
2. Materials and Methods
The animal portion of this experiment was approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the University of Kentucky.
Fecal material for composting was obtained from nine horses (9.1 ± 2.1 yr; 600.9 ± 50.6 kg initial BW) fed three different treatment pellets, with varying sources and levels of trace minerals. The experiment was designed as a replicated 3 × 3 Latin square, with three treatments assigned to three blocks of three horses, each over three time periods. All horses received each of the three dietary treatments in a random order (
n = 9 per treatment). Dietary treatments were provided in a soybean-meal-based pellet with either no added trace minerals (CON), added inorganic trace minerals (ING), or added organic trace minerals (ORG). The ING and ORG treatments were formulated to contain the same amount of trace minerals, with the difference being source. The added trace minerals were cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), manganese (Mn), and zinc (Zn). The inorganic forms were provided as cobalt carbonate, copper sulfate, manganous oxide, and zinc oxide. The organic forms were provided as metal proteinates (BioPlex
®; Alltech, Nicholasville, KY, USA). The final feed analysis showed that ORG had lower levels of trace minerals compared with ING (
Table 1), therefore horses fed ORG received 0.25% of body weight (BW) per day of the ORG pellet, while ING and CON received 0.2% of BW per day. Thus, the ING and ORG treatments received the same amount of minerals on a per kg BW basis.
Each treatment period consisted of a 5-days washout and a 16-days feeding period. Throughout the experiment, horses were kept in fields with ad libitum access to forage at all times. Horses also had unlimited access to water. During the washout, horses were only allowed to consume forage and the treatment pellet was withheld. During the feeding period, horses were fed their assigned treatment pellets in feed nosebags (Feedrite Feed Bag; Cashel Company, Granbery, TX, USA) once per day (08:00 h).
Fecal material was collected on day 16 of the feeding period. In the morning of day 16, horses were brought into rubber-matted stalls without shavings, and all fecal material excreted from each horse over an 8-h period (08:00 to 16:00 h) was collected. Feces were collected from the floor immediately following defecation, and composited into bags that were kept closed to prevent moisture loss. At the end of the 8-h period composited feces from each horse were thoroughly mixed. Approximately 1.75 kg of wet feces was saved and stored at −20 °C for mineral analysis and leaching. Those data are reported in a companion paper [
18]. The remaining fecal material for each horse was composted.
The composting process was conducted in an environmentally controlled room maintained at 24 °C. Feces from each horse were placed in 5-gallon buckets (n = 9 per treatment). Long-stem wheat straw (<0.005 mg Co kg−1 DM; 0.9 mg Cu kg−1 DM; 48 mg Mn kg−1 DM; 6 Zn kg−1 DM) was added to each bucket at a rate of 2.5% of fecal wet weight and thoroughly mixed in. Buckets were sealed with lids that had a rubber septum attached for gas sampling. After 14 h, buckets were shaken by hand and a gas sample was pulled from each bucket using a gas-tight syringe. Gas samples were analyzed for carbon dioxide and methane using gas chromatography. Holes were then drilled into the 5-gallon buckets to provide aeration and the lids were left off the buckets. Temperature of the compost was monitored on a regular basis. Water was added as needed to keep compost moist and compost was aerated by manual turning as needed.
A subsample (n = 3) of compost was tested for C and N and it was determined that compost maturity was sufficient to stop the experiment by day 98 (C:N = 20:1). At this time, compost was weighed and dry matter (DM) was measured to determine DM disappearance (DMD). A sample was frozen for later analysis.
Compost samples were leached using an apparatus that simulates a rainfall event and allows for capture of the leachate. This method has been described elsewhere [
18]. After leaching, the leached compost samples were dried at 55 °C for 24 h and ground for analysis.
Pre-leached compost and leached compost samples were analyzed for minerals using inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS) following acidic closed-vessel microwave digestion. An ICP-MS instrument (7500cx, Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA) was used to analyze for Co, Cu, Mn, and Zn. For the digestion, 0.25 g of dried and ground sample was weighed into Teflon digestion vessels. Ten milliliters of trace element grade nitric acid (VWR International LLC, Radnor, PA, USA) were added to each vessel for ICP-MS analysis. The following protocol was used to microwave digest the samples: ramp 20 to 25 min, hold 15 min at 200 °C, cool 15 min (MARS 6; CEM Corporation, Matthews, NC, USA). Following digestion, samples were diluted as needed for analysis. For quality control, digestion duplicates were included every 10 samples and a standard reference material (peach leaves; NIST, Gaithersburg, MD, USA) was included in the digestion and analysis procedure.
Concentrations of minerals in the pre-leached and leached compost samples were used to calculate the percent of minerals that leached. Mineral, DMD, and gas data were analyzed as a replicated 3 × 3 Latin square using an ANOVA (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). The model included dietary treatment, period, block, and horse within block. If significance was detected, means were separated using an LSD test. Differences among treatment means are indicated with the use of letters (‘a’, ‘b’, and ‘c’ for p < 0.05 or ‘α’ and ‘β’ for 0.05 < p < 0.10); means followed by a similar letter do not differ from each other.
Simple correlations using Pearson’s correlation coefficients were examined among the amounts of supplemented trace minerals (Co, Cu, Mn, and Zn) that leached from the compost. These correlations were made within treatments to examine if mineral form of the supplemented mineral affected the tendency to leach with other minerals. Only significant correlations with r > 0.50 were reported.
Significance was defined as p < 0.05 and a trend as 0.05 < p < 0.10.