Manure Sniffer Warns Of SpillsThe Capital Times :: METRO :: B2Saturday, May 27, 2006 By Kristopher Wenn Herald-Times Reporter
Russ
Tooley and his friends can rest a little easier knowing they have
something watching for manure spills in Manitowoc County waterways all
day, every day. Tooley, a resident of Cleveland, Wis., is president
of Centerville CARES, a local conservation group that lobbies for more
stringent rules and enforcement on county farms to prevent manure
spills. Last fall, Tooley and his fellow conservationists built a
water-quality sensing device they call a manure sniffer. They hope it
will allow them to keep track of manure spills into Point Creek that
might otherwise could go unnoticed. Tooley lives about 1 1/2
miles from Maple Leaf Dairy, one of two dairy farms referred earlier
this year to the Wisconsin Department of Justice for alleged manure
spills into county creeks.
"It's very comforting knowing that someone -- something -- is
monitoring the water," Tooley said. "When (the machine) is not calling
us I can have some confidence that the water is just water, instead of
it being liquid manure."
The manure sniffer contains a sensor placed inside a piece of PVC pipe,
which hangs from a crane made from PVC piping that is driven into the
ground alongside Point Creek. The sensor is connected to a computer and
a cell phone, which are powered by a motorcycle battery. The
sensor collects data every 15 minutes, with information on water
temperature, conductivity and dissolved oxygen levels at Point Creek
stored in a computer. A team tests the water twice a week for indications of manure.
Manure reduces the water's level of dissolved oxygen, causing fish and
other aquatic life to die. A waterway's conductivity level increases
when manure or urine enters, due to the waste's high salt content.
If conductivity rises dramatically or if dissolved oxygen lowers to a
certain point, it can indicate a manure spill. The sniffer sends a text
message to Tooley's cell phone. Tooley does not claim a sniffer
reading proves manure is in the water. It will, however, indicate that
something in the water has changed and bears investigating. He says the
method is similar to what state Department of Natural Resources wardens
use to flag potential water quality issues. "If it calls us on a
cell phone, we can come out and look," he said. "If it smells like
manure and there are dead fish around, then we'll call the DNR and they
can make a determination." The manure sniffer costs $5,000 and
you won't find it on store shelves. Tooley and his friends hope to
develop less expensive systems for conservation groups to use
throughout the state. C-CARES members said they want to build a
simpler version of the manure sniffer that would cost under $1,000. A
$100 model that would store only water conductivity data is also being
considered. Once devices like the manure sniffer become
affordable, the group plans to lobby for rules requiring some farmers
to have water quality detectors on the end of all drain tiles coming
out from under farm fields. Garth Hammond of C-CARES said
farmers might be more careful in applying manure knowing that the
sniffer is about. C-CARES members said they spent four years developing
the device. Over that time they found elevated levels of E. coli
bacteria and other agents blamed for local well contamination, fish
kills and Lake Michigan beach closings, they say. The group
tests water samples at Point and Fischer Creeks for the University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point and the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture,
Trade and Consumer Protection. Donna Hammond said the manure
sniffer gives a more credible alarm about a potential spill than merely
relying on visual observations. "The whole idea is that wells
got contaminated and that's a concern," Hammond said. "If you can see
it coming rather than waiting for someone to get ill, then you won't
say, 'Oh, this is where it came from.' We were trying to be proactive
rather than reactive." The Brico Fund, a Milwaukee-based
philanthropic organization, provided a grant for the manure sniffer and
the group's E. coli bacteria sampling, Tooley said.
|