1. Introduction
Manure management accounts for 9.2% of methane (CH
4) emissions in the United States of America (US) in the 2020 emission inventory [
1]. Estimating CH
4 emissions requires an understanding of the influences of manure composition, type of manure storage, age of the manure, and the environment on the emissions [
2]. The anaerobic environment that produces CH
4 also produces hydrogen sulfide (H
2S), a major odorant and asphyxiant associated with animal agriculture [
3]. While few studies have evaluated the CH
4 emissions from dairies, fewer studies have measured both CH
4 and H
2S emissions to assess the similarities in the production and emissions of these gasses.
Dairy operations in the dry western US are typically free stall systems with exercise areas or open lots. Reported CH
4 emissions from waste storage facilities in such dairies are limited and vary widely. Emissions from the wastewater pond of one Idaho open-lot dairy during 13 d of measurements across six months ranged from 152 g d
−1 hd
−1 (hd = head) to 1774 g d
−1 hd
−1 (0.46 mg m
−2 s
−1 to 5.32 mg m
−2 s
−1) with the highest emissions not corresponding to the warmest conditions [
4]. A short-term study of CH
4 emissions from a waste pond at a dairy in Idaho ranged from 2.8 to 22.8 g d
−1 hd
−1 [
5]. Emissions from a batch-filled shallow waste storage tank at an Ontario dairy ranged from 9 g d
−1 hd
−1 to 41 g d
−1hd
−1 (0.011 mg m
−2 s
−1 to 0.153 mg m
−2 s
−1) from 105 half-hourly measurements from January through mid-July [
6]. A deep, long-term storage tank in Ontario had a mean CH
4 emission based on daily sampling near noon from mid-June to mid-November of 833 g d
−1 hd
−1 (1.8 mg m
−2 s
−1) [
7]. Mean daily CH
4 emission in October and November of 295 g d
−1 hd
−1 (0.270 mg m
−2 s
−1) and 166 g d
−1 hd
−1 (0.152 mg m
−2 s
−1) at a Wisconsin dairy storage basin [
8].
Methanogenesis within the manure is regulated by the availability of organic substrate, the temperature and pH of the substrate, and the salinity of the solution [
9]. A simplified representation of the reaction associated with anaerobic heterophilic bacteria and methanogenic archaea [
9,
10] is:
with VS (volatile solids) representing the readily decomposable organic carbon substrate of the waste. The temperature sensitivity of emissions is due to the biological methanogenesis of various organic components in solid dairy waste [
11,
12]. The optimum temperature range for methanogenic bacteria is 35 °C to 45 °C, with a decrease in CH
4 production of approximately an order of magnitude as the temperature decreases to 15 °C [
13]. The temperature sensitivity of dairy manure CH
4 emissions is evident in mixing chamber studies [
14,
15] and some field studies [
8,
16] but not in other field studies [
4,
7]. These conflicting results are likely related to the specific temperature measurements used in the association (air or slurry), the coupling of the air temperatures to the slurry temperatures, and the complexity of CH
4 production [
17] and oxidation [
18] within the manure. The aging of manure enhances the diversity of methanogenic bacteria and archaea [
17].
Methane is produced throughout the vertical column of manure in a basin [
19]. Since methane has a very low solubility in water (0.0014 mol kg
−1 bar
−1) [
20], the CH
4 produced forms bubbles [
3]. Hydrogen sulfide also has low solubility in water (0.10 mol kg
−1 bar
−1) [
20]; however, the solubility is 100-fold greater than CH
4. Bubbles of predominantly H
2S, CH
4, or a combination of these gases will be buoyant in the liquid manure column since the densities of H
2S (0.136.3 g m
−3) and CH
4 (0.00066 g m
−3) are much less than that of pure water (1000 kg m
−3).
Dairy manure storage commonly crusts at the surface as a result of high total solids content and high evaporation rates. The dry climates in the western US often result in the formation of crusts on the stored manure [
21,
22,
23]. The transport of the gases from the bottom of the crust to the open air above the crust depends on interstitial spaces and cracks in the crust and can occur by molecular diffusion and convection. The convective transport may be influenced by the barometric pressure, resulting in pressure pumping [
24,
25]. Crusts themselves can have significant methanogenic activity [
19]. Gas released on bubbles bursting along the base of the crust will rise through the porous crust, interact with the microbial populations in the crust, and enter the overlying air of the manure storage area since the density of both gases is much less than that of air at ambient pressure. However, as the gas moves through the crust the presence of methane oxidizing bacteria (MOB) consuming the produced CH
4 on microsites on the fibrous crust structure [
18] may result in an overall reduction in CH
4 emissions.
Hydrogen sulfide (H
2S) is also produced as a byproduct of the breakdown of animal manure [
26]. In treatment lagoons, heterotrophic sulfate-reducing bacteria reduce sulfate (SO
4−2) from the organic matter in the manure to produce H
2S, carbon dioxide and new cells [
3] at depth in the anaerobic lagoon. In addition, purple sulfur bacteria can oxidize CH
4 in the presence of sulfate in anoxic environments as [
27]:
with the HS
− in equilibrium with H
2S depending on pH of the solution: HS
− + H
+ ⇔ H
2S. Consequently, the production of CH
4 and H
2S may not only be both occurring in the anoxic environment of the manure sludge, but may also be inter-related stoichiometrically, with decreases in CH
4 emissions corresponding to increases in H
2S emissions. Mukhtar and Mutlu measured H
2S emissions from a lagoon manure storage system of a western US open-lot dairy during several days in winter and summer of 1 to 17 g d
−1 hd
−1 depending on the cell measured [
28].
This study describes characteristics of CH
4 emissions from a slurry storage of a western US free-stall dairy during filling and drying of the basin and explores the similarities in the CH
4 emissions with those of H
2S at the same dairy where the mean daily H
2S emissions was greater when the slurry storage basin was filling than when drying [
23]. The goals of this study were to: (1) to estimate the daily mean CH
4 emissions and explore the factors influencing the emissions and (2) to understand the similarities and differences in CH
4 and H
2S emissions associated with the storage of manure at a western free stall dairy. It was hypothesized that, since both CH
4 and H
2S are anaerobically produced and partially determined by the available organic matter substrate, biological activity, and environmental conditions, they are likely produced in the same region of the manure storage. Furthermore, since both CH
4 and H
2S are relatively insoluble in water and hence largely rise through the liquid manure column as bubbles that either break or reside at the bottom of the manure crust and transport through the porous manure crust similarly, it was hypothesized that: (1) the emissions of CH
4 and H
2S at this dairy are highly correlated given the same environmental conditions and (2) the emission of CH
4 decreases as the stored manure ages and the basin shifts from filling to drying as was indicated in a prior study of H
2S emissions at this dairy [
23].
3. Results and Discussion
The daily air temperature varied from 9.3 °C to 31.7 °C over the entire period, with a mean of 20.8 °C (SD 4.5 °C). Measurements were made for 23 days when the basin was filling and 21 days when the basin was drying down. Most meteorological conditions were similar between the manure filling and manure drying periods. The daily mean barometric pressure varied from 97.3 kPa to 98.9 kPa during manure filling and 97.6 kPa to 99.1 kPa during manure dry down. Daily mean atmospheric water vapor ranged from 0.6 to 1.7 kPa (0.6 to 1.4 kPa) during manure filling (drying). Daily mean wind speeds varied from 1.6 m s−1 to 6.2 m s−1 (1.2 m s−1 to 4.0 m s−1) during filling (dry down). The daily mean temperatures were higher during filling (15 °C to 32 °C) than during dry down (9 °C to 22 °C).
Prevailing winds were from the north northwest. Winds were mostly associated with katabatic and anabatic slope flow with upslope anabatic winds (northerly winds) during the daytime (8 to 17 LT) and downslope katabatic winds (southerly winds) during the nighttime (20 to 6 LT) (
Figure 2). Downslope katabatic winds corresponded with relatively stable air (positive
z/L) (
Figure 2). The most turbulent winds (
U* > 0.4 m s
−1) largely occurred during the daytime in an unstable surface boundary layer.
Exclusion of mean half-hour measurements due to the criteria stated above reduced the 1553 half-hour measurement intervals to 528 valid half hourly mean emission measurements: 395 half hour measurements during the filling period and 133 measurements during the drying period. The mean daily emissions for both phases of manure handling were determined by averaging the ½ h emissions for each day regardless of the number of measurements. The error in mean emissions during the filling and dry-down phases were estimated to be 1% and 2%, respectively.
3.1. Half-Hourly Mean Emissions
The median CH
4 emissions were 34.2 g s
−1. The distribution of half-hourly CH
4 emissions measurements was non-normal with more than 60% of half-hourly CH
4 emissions less than 40 g s
−1 (
Figure 3). Log10 transformation of the half-hourly emissions was likewise non-normal (Kolmogorov–Smirnov D statistic of 0.17 with D
max of 0.03;
n = 712). Outlier CH
4 emissions were half-hour mean values above 119.6 g s
−1. Outlier emissions occurred more often in the night time than day time; likely due to the more variable flow conditions in a stable boundary layer (positive
z/L) with relatively low friction velocities. The non-outlier mean half-hourly CH
4 emissions over the study period were 45.0 g s
−1 with a median emission of 34.0 g s
−1. Half-hourly CH
4 emission were highest under southerly winds (
Figure 1). Since the basin inlet was on the north end of the basin, this could be due to the close upwind proximity of the inlet to the line air sampler.
Given the nominal duration of filling of the basin, measurements were made from day 257 to day 280 of manure filling and the first 23 days of drying. On 3 September, the fresh manure was rerouted from the monitored basin to a second basin to the west and the manure in the monitored basin began to dry down.
3.2. Influence of Meteorological Conditions on Half-Hourly Mean Emissions
There was no evident influence of air temperature (used as a proxy for manure temperature) on the non-outlier emissions of CH
4. (R = 0.08;
n = 459). The lack of correlation between air temperature and CH
4 emissions (R
2 for van’t Hoff solubility function of 0.01 for half-hourly emissions) was probably related partly to a combination of minimal CH
4 diffusion associated with gas solubility in solution (solubility of CH
4 0.0014 mol kg
−1 bar
−1 [
20]) resulting in most CH
4 transported through the manure as bubbles and partly to the lack of correspondence of air temperature to the manure temperature under the crust where methanogenesis occurred. Similarly, the half-hourly CH
4 emissions were not linearly correlated with the
VPD (R = 0.1) and therefore unlikely to influence the drying.
There was a weak linear correlation between wind speed and non-outlier emissions of CH
4 (R = 0.31;
n = 459). The corresponding measure of turbulent mixing (
U*), was however not correlated with non-outlier emissions (R = 0.03). The lack of linear correlation of CH
4 emissions with
U* was likely due to the changes in surface boundary layer stability. Wind speeds were greater when the wind was from the SSW than all other directions (
Figure 2B), corresponding with a stable layer of downslope katabatic flow (
Figure 2D) on the 11° slope. In contrast, the
U* was highest during the day with winds from the west (
Figure 2C). Since the catabatic nighttime winds were more stable than the anabatic upslope winds, the linear correlation between
U* or
U would be expected to differ. As a result, the linear correlation between U
* or
U and CH
4 emissions will be confounded by the differences in the relationship of U
* to
U. This lack of linear correlation of wind speed and CH
4 emissions has also been reported for slurry stores in Idaho [
4] and Ontario [
6].
Methane emissions were slightly greater during the night time (mean = 60.9 g CH
4 s
−1, SD= 75.6 g CH
4 s
−1,
n = 231;
Figure 4) than day time (mean = 38.1 g CH
4 s
−1, SD = 32.6 g CH
4 s
−1,
n = 258) during both basin filling and dry-down. Excluding outlier emissions, CH
4 emissions were not significantly different between night time (mean = 37.7 g CH
4 s
−1, SD = 30.3 g CH
4 s
−1,
n = 201) and day time (mean = 33.2 g CH
4 s
−1, SD = 25.7 g CH
4 s
−1, n = 257) (Student’s
t = 0.01). Similarly, neither Leytem et al. [
4] or Bjorneberg et al. [
5] observed clear diurnal CH
4 emissions variations for dairy storage ponds in Idaho.
3.3. Influence of Producer Activity on Half-Hourly Mean Emissions
Basin CH4 emissions were segregated between emissions while filling and emissions while drying down. Non-outlier median CH4 emissions were slightly higher during filling (47.1 g CH4 s−1) than during dry down (45.0 g CH4 s−1). The distributions of the CH4 emissions during the two phases of operation were not normally distributed (filling: Kolmogorov–Smirnov D statistic of 0.06 with Dmax of 0.05, n = 226, dry-down: Kolmogorov–Smirnov D statistic of 0.15 with Dmax of 0.01, n = 133). The emissions during filling and dry-down were not significantly different (Mann–Wilcoxon test; Z statistic 0.41, p < 0.68).
Emissions during filling and to a lesser extent during drying appeared to be more consistently low during the daytime when the
U* was high (
Figure 4). Emissions during drying also showed lower emissions during the daytime when the
U* was high, but less distinctly than during filling (
Figure 4).
3.4. Daily Mean Emissions
There were 23 measurement days during the filling phase and 21 measurement days during the dry-down phase (
Figure 5;
supplementary material). Given the modeling and measurement errors, the mean emission during each phase had an error of 4%. The median CH
4 emission for the basin was 45.4 g CH
4 s
−1 with values above 111.8 g CH
4 s
−1 determined to be outliers. The only outlier CH
4 emissions occurred on 24 August 2008 with a daily mean methane emission of 156 g CH
4 s
−1. No producer activity involving dried manure piling or wet manure spreading, injecting, or discing was unique to this date [
23]. The non-outlier daily mean CH
4 emissions were not normally distributed (Kolmogorov–Smirnov D statistic of 0.26 with D
max(0.05) of 0.23).
The daily mean CH
4 emissions for the basin on an area basis were 3.9 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1. This area-based mean emission was similar to that of one Idaho open-lot dairy (0.46 mg m
−2 s
−1 to 5.32 mg m
−2 s
−1) [
4], greater than a second Idaho dairy (0.41 to 1.1 mg m
−2 s
−1) [
5], and less than the 18.3 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1 mean emissions across six slurry store emission studies [
40]. Emissions were greater than from an Ontario waste storage tank, where emissions ranged from 0.011 mg m
−2 s
−1 in January to 0.153 mg m
−2 s
−1 in July [
6].
The daily mean CH
4 emission for the slurry basin on a per-head basis was 861 g d
−1 hd
−1. This CH
4 emission was within the range of 152 g d
−1 hd
−1 to 1774 g d
−1 hd
−1 reported from the wastewater pond of one Idaho open-lot dairy [
4] and greater than the per-head emissions at a second Idaho dairy (single day emissions measured in four months ranging from 2.8 g d
−1 hd
−1 to 22.8 g d
−1 hd
−1) [
5] and for a storage tank on an Ontario dairy (ranging from 9 g d
−1 hd
−1 to 41 g d
−1 hd
−1 [
6]. The daily mean emissions were greater than the 276 g d
−1 hd
−1 mean emission across six slurry store emission studies in western Europe [
40].
3.5. Influence of Meteorological Conditions on Daily Mean Emissions
Emissions from the crusted surface were expected to be related to the environmental conditions. The crust was expected to thicken (although not measured) over time as solids rise to the surface and evaporation occurs at the surface. Increased evaporation occurs when the
VPD increases at the liquid: air interface, when the liquid: air interface is near the crust surface, and when turbulent mixing between the crust surface and the air increases. During the course of this study, the environmental
Tair,
U*, and
VPD all trended downwards (
Figure 5).
The linear decrease in
Tair was −0.2 °C d
−1 (R = 0.56,
n = 43). However, there was no evident influence of air temperature (commonly used as a proxy for manure temperature) on the emissions of CH
4. A linear correlation of daily mean air temperature with CH
4 emissions had an R of 0.1 (
n = 43). Similarly, the R
2 for van’t Hoff solubility function was less than 0.01. The lack of significant relationship between daily mean air temperature and CH
4 emissions was probably a result of the low solubility of CH
4 and the lack of correspondence between air temperature and the temperature of the manure at the biologically active surfaces. This was consistent with the lack of apparent influence of air temperature on emissions of another low-solubility but biologically produced gas, H
2S (0.10 mol kg
−1 bar
−1; [
41], from the same basin [
23] as well as from other manure storages [
4,
6]. This was in contrast to Leytem et al. [
16] and Grant et al. [
8] who found air temperature to correlate with CH
4 emissions from smaller settling and storage basins.
The mean daily
U* decreased with time over the study period, largely a result of two days with high
U* in August (
Figure 5). The correlation coefficient for a linear function between daily mean
U* and daily mean CH
4 emissions was only 0.30 (n = 38), which suggests that the transport of CH
4 was not primarily limited by the turbulent transport but must be limited by processes at or below the crust surface. The lack of linear correlation between winds and CH
4 emissions was consistent with the emissions from large manure storage basins in Idaho [
4] but contrasts with correlations at another large manure storage basin in Idaho [
5] and a smaller manure storage basin in Wisconsin [
8].
There was a linear decline in
VPD of 0.03 kPa (R = 0.47,
n = 43) over the course of the study period, trending in the same pattern as the air temperature (
Figure 5). It was expected that the drying of a moist crust would be a function of
VPD, with the drying crust shifting the liquid air interface further into the crust and increasing the resistance to CH
4 transport. However, as was the case with
U*, the daily mean CH
4 emissions were not linearly correlated with the
VPD (R = 0.14,
n = 43). Visual assessments of the crust surface confirmed that very little of the surface was moist. Leytem and coworkers [
4] suggested that crusts on the manure dry out as the air temperatures rises, resulting in increased crust porosity and decreased resistance to gas transport.
Cracks were often observed in the 100% crusted surface throughout the study period. If transport of the gasses through the was driven partly by convective pressure pumping [
21,
22], daily changes in barometric pressure should correlate with emissions. The lack of linear correlation between daily mean CH
4 emissions (R ≤ 0.01,
n = 35) and changes in barometric pressure implies that the diffusion through the cracks dominated the transport to the manure surface and/or the transport was not influenced by pressure gradients and/or the variation in pressure gradients was too small to detect an influence.
3.6. Influence of Producer Activity on Daily Mean Emissions
The daily mean emissions decreased at a rate of 0.3 g s
−1 d
−1 throughout the study period (
Figure 5). This would suggest that the daily mean emissions during the basin manure drying phase would be less than that of the filling phase- in contrast to the mean half-hourly emissions. Daily mean CH
4 emissions ranged from 17 g CH
4 s
−1 (1.5 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1) to 156 g CH
4 s
−1 (11.9 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1) during filling (
n = 23) and 9 g CH
4 s
−1 (0.7 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1) to 77 g CH
4 s
−1 (5.9 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1) during dry down (
n = 21). Median daily emissions over the period of basin filling were 46 g CH
4 s
−1 (3.5 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1; 784 g d
−1 hd
−1,
n = 23) while those while the basin manure was drying were 45 g CH
4 s
−1 (3.4 mg CH
4 m
−2 s
−1; 766 g d
−1 hd
−1,
n = 21). However, as found for the half-hourly CH
4 emissions, the daily mean emissions during the filling and drying down were not significantly different (Mann–Wilcoxon test; W statistic 187,
p = 0.4). This lack of difference in CH
4 emissions as the manure ages in the basin is consistent with laboratory studies [
14]. So even though the manure changes composition and presumably also increases methanogenic population diversity [
17] as the manure ages in the basin from filling to drying, there was no net emissions effect.
Variation in the measured daily mean CH
4 emissions may be due in part to interference from other nearby sources. The producer spreading, discing, and injecting of manure as well as nearby windrows may potentially decrease the measured emissions by advection and deposition of CH
4 in the basin from this activity. Relatively high half-hourly mean CH
4 emissions occurred when the winds were coming from the SE (
Figure 1). There were however only three days of manure handling activity when winds were from between 0° and 135°. Advection of CH
4 from field emissions was not likely on these days since the median daily C
BG (4.8 ppm) was within the measurement error of the instrument (11%) of the median C
BG for all days with valid emission estimates (4.5 ppm). The median daily CH
4 emissions when the winds were from direction of the field activity (
n = 3) were 67.2 g s
−1, while the median daily mean CH
4 emissions for all days with wind directions between 0° and 135° was 45.4 g s
−1 (
n = 9). This difference in emission on the days of manure handling and no manure handling was however significant: the Mann–Wilcoxon test indicated a significant difference (W statistic 16,
p = 0.04) and the difference was much greater than the calculated 9.8% measurement error for the mean emission for these three days. Two of the three days with winds between 0° and 135° occurred during filling. Again, since the basin inlet was on the north end of the basin, the higher emissions could also be due to the close upwind proximity of the inlet to the line air sampler and not the manure handling activity.
3.7. Relationship between Basin CH4 and H2S Emissions
During the period of measurement of CH4 emission, H2S emissions ranged from 21 mg H2S s−1 to 346 mg H2S s−1 during filling and from 15 mg H2S s−1 to 336 mg H2S s−1 during drying. The median H2S emission was 204 mg H2S s−1. There were no days with outlier daily mean H2S emissions: the single day of outlier CH4 emission corresponded to the highest daily mean H2S emission. The median H2S emissions during filling were 204 mg H2S s−1 (156 μg H2S m−2 s−1) while those during dry-down were 193 mg H2S s−1 (147 μg H2S m−2 s−1).
Emissions of CH
4 were correlated with those of H
2S during both the filling and drying phases for both half-hourly mean values and daily values (
Figure 6). The linear correlation between half-hourly emissions of CH
4 and H
2S were similar both during filling (n = 43) and drying (
n = 75) at R = 0.69 and 0.66, respectively, with the slope of the filling period correlation within the 95% confidence interval of the drying period (
Figure 6). Similarly, the linear correlation between daily mean emissions of CH
4 and H
2S were similar, but the correlation during filling (
n = 12) was somewhat lower than that during drying (
n = 17) at R = 0.42 and 0.66, respectively. This difference in the relationship was, however, not significant at the 95% confidence interval (
Figure 6).
The high linear correlations between CH
4 and H
2S emissions for both half-hourly and daily time periods suggests that similar processes influenced their emissions as hypothesized. Since differences in the environmental conditions did not correlate with CH
4 emissions (discussed previously) or H
2S emissions [
23], but do correlate with each other, we conclude that conditions for microbial activity within the manure basin were likely similar for the production of the gases and that the mechanisms of emissions of the produced gases from the basin were likely similar. Since the diversity of bacterial populations increase with age of manure [
17], one might expect changes in the relationship between CH
4 and H
2S emissions. Furthermore, we conclude that significant populations of purple sulfur bacteria linking the consumption of CH
4 to the production of H
2S was unlikely since enhanced production of H
2S at the expense of CH
4 over time was not observed.
Aging of the manure appeared to reduce the emissions of both gases. The median daily CH4 emissions were 3% higher during basin filling than during dry down, while H2S emissions were 5% higher during drying than filling. However, as stated above, this difference in daily mean CH4 emissions was not significantly different at α = 0.05 (without considering the measurement error). Similarly, the daily mean H2S emissions were lower during dry-down of the basin manure than filling but not significantly (filling n = 12; dry-down n = 17) n (Mann–Wilcoxon test; W statistic 89, p = 0.98).
The CH
4/H
2S emission ratio for the basin was 223 g CH
4 g H
2S
−1 +/− 16 g CH
4 g H
2S
−1. Although the periods of measurement differ for emissions of CH
4 and H
2S from a slurry storage that never fully dried and was not always crusted at a Wisconsin dairy, the ratio was similar at 268 g CH
4 g H
2S
−1 [
8,
42]. This suggested that the bacterial species involved in decomposition of the dairy manure slurry were similar between locations while the population present and/or available substrate for decomposition differed.