Dust emissions from a tunnel-ventilated broiler poultry shed with fresh and partially reused litter


Autoria(s): Modini, Robin L.; Agranovski, Victoria; Meyer, Nickolas K.; Gallagher, Erin; Dunlop, Mark; Ristovski, Zoran
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Dust emissions from large-scale, tunnel-ventilated poultry sheds could have negative health and environmental impacts. Despite this fact, the literature concerning dust emissions from tunnel-ventilated poultry sheds in Australia and overseas is relatively scarce. Dust measurements were conducted during two consecutive production cycles at a single broiler shed on a poultry farm near Ipswich, Queensland. Fresh litter was employed during the first cycle and partially reused litter was employed during the second cycle. This provided an opportunity to study the effect that partial litter reuse has on dust emissions. Dust levels were characterised by the number concentration of suspended particles having diameter between 0.5–20 μm and by the mass concentration of dust particles below 10 μm diameter (PM10) and 2.5 μm diameter (PM2.5). In addition, we measured the number size distributions of dust particles. The average concentration and emission rate of dust was higher when partially reused litter was used in the shed than when fresh litter was used. In addition we found that dust particles emitted from the shed with partially reused litter were finer than the particles emitted with fresh litter. Although the change in litter properties is certainly contributing to this observed variability, other factors such as ventilation rate and litter moisture content are also likely to be involved.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/38669/

Publicador

CSIRO

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/38669/1/38669.pdf

DOI:10.1071/AN09207

Modini, Robin L., Agranovski, Victoria, Meyer, Nickolas K., Gallagher, Erin, Dunlop, Mark, & Ristovski, Zoran (2010) Dust emissions from a tunnel-ventilated broiler poultry shed with fresh and partially reused litter. Animal Production Science, 50(5&6), pp. 552-556.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 CSIRO

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Physics

Palavras-Chave #040101 Atmospheric Aerosols #040199 Atmospheric Sciences not elsewhere classified #Poultry Shed #Dust Emissions #Suspended Particles #Particle Mass #Particle Number
Tipo

Journal Article