The University of Arizona, College of Agriculture
Greater Harmony Between Agriculture and the Environment
PM-10 Dust Measurements
Issue
Dust produced through tillage operations can result in lost topsoil, reduced visibility, hazards
for equipment operators and reduced air quality. Growers would like to reduce dust emissions
from farm practices, and in the past decade several tillage implements have been developed to deal
with the problem. Since the late 1980s, when the Yuma-Somerton area and parts of Maricopa
County were found to be in violation of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS),
work has been underway to evaluate different minimum tillage systems to reduce emissions.
What has been done?
At the request of the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, Wayne Coates, a
professor in the UA Office of Arid Lands Studies, has measured particulate emissions from five
different tillage systems and has evaluated the appropriateness of an equation used by the EPA to
estimate emissions in Yuma-Somerton and other areas. In his work he has quantified particulate
emissions from tillage operations and assessed the magnitude of reduction that would be obtained
if reduced tillage practices were adopted. Coates determined that a stalk puller and a USM
(uprooter/shredder/mulcher) implement produced the fewest emissions. He also determined that
the EPA's AP-42 emissions factor equation was inaccurate to begin with because it only had one
variable in it: silt content.
Impact
Coates' goal was to provide improved data to document more accurately the dust contribution
from agricultural tillage operations. To this end, he has testified before a U.S. House
subcommittee, comparing his measured emissions figures with those from the equation: his
measurements for the Yuma area were half those predicted by the equation.
During the 1998
session, the Arizona Legislature passed a law creating a task force to set up best management
practices (BMPs) for field operations to help reduce dust in the air. Coates' research is
contributing to the development of reasonable practices growers can implement to meet the
BMPs.
Funding
Arizona Department of Environmental Quality
Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station
Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program
Contact
Wayne Coates, Research Professor
Office of Arid Lands Studies
The University of Arizona
1955 E. 6 Street
Tucson, AZ 85721
Tel.: (520) 741-0840 FAX: (520) 621-7834
Email: wcoates@ag.arizona.edu
This report is one of 29 impact statements submitted by the University
of Arizona College of Agriculture to the USDA's 1999 CSREES Science and Education
Impacts
database in Washington, D.C. An impact statement is a brief summary, in lay terms, of the
economic, environmental and/or social impact of a land-grant program. It states
accomplishments and their payoff to society.
Located at http://ag.arizona.edu/impacts/2000/dustmeasure.html
Return to Impact report listing |