The effort to clean up the Fraser River has yielded some unusual
solutions to pollution.
Testing near the agricultural area around Abbotsford in the
lower Fraser valley revealed that the groundwater contains
too high a level of nitrates. Heavy use of poultry manure by
berry growers was found to be a major source of groundwater
pollution.
Ceasing the production of berries or poultry would not be
a workable solution. Berry crops account for more than seven
percent of farm income in the lower mainland area of British
Columbia, while poultry accounts for another 21 percent. Growers
have been urged to reduce their use of fertilizer by adjusting
it scientifically to the actual need of the soil. Poultry producers
were given a new market for bird manure.
Bird manure is treated to remove disease-causing organisms
and odour. The manure is then pressed into pellets to be sold
as an ingredient of commercial fertilizer.
Another potential market for this manure lies in the recycling
of it into cattle feed. The digestive systems of poultry are
inefficient and expel valuable nutrients in the birds' manure.
Processed poultry manure is used as a cattle feed in the United
States, but not yet in Canada.
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