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Read the
magazine
story to find out more. |
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 ARS
scientists are working on ways to reduce losses of methane and ammonia from
compost, particularly from food residuals. |
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 Some of the finished
compost from this research is delivered to the National Mall for use in the
People's Garden at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Jamie L. Whitten Federal
Building. Photo courtesy of USDA. |
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Recycling Food Scraps into Gardens
By Don Comis
September 4, 2009
Each weekday, food scraps are collected from the
Maryland Food Distribution Authority in
Jessup, Md., and from small local food service and marketing establishments.
Materials that do not contain metal, glass, or plastic are trucked to the
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
Henry
A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC) in Beltsville,
Md.
There, they are mixed with woodchips, leaves and other organic
residuals. Several months later, some of the finished compost is delivered to
the National Mall for use in gardens at the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) Jamie L. Whitten Federal Building.
For
Patricia
Millner, a microbiologist at the ARS
Environmental
Microbial and Food Safety Laboratory at BARC, this is part of research on
ways to reduce the release of methane from landfills by diverting food
residuals and other organic materials to composting. She conducts this research
with microbiologist
Walter
Mulbry, who works in the ARS
Environmental
Management and Byproduct Utilization Laboratory at BARC.
In 2009, they are supplying compost to the inaugural People's
Garden, part of a new program for creating a community garden at each
USDA facility worldwide, as well as for landscaping at the
U.S. Botanic Garden and the
U.S. Capitol.
Millner also makes compost available for other federal
green projectssuch as roof gardens, rain gardens and other
landscaping designsto retain water and reduce runoff at federal sites in
the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.
As part of Millners efforts to help the federal government model
ways to compost food scraps, she has a Cooperative Research and Development
Agreement with RCM, LLC of Maryland to capture ammonia in the final compost to
boost its nitrogen content for fertilizer use. She is comparing several types
of insulated composting containers for greenhouse gas emission reduction and
other cost-benefit characteristics.
Currently, about half of the carbon and nitrogen in composting
materials is lost to the air, rather than being captured in the compost.
Read more
about this and other research involving local food production and sustainable
agriculture in the September 2009 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is USDA's principal intramural scientific research agency.