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ABSTRACT
The potential adverse effects of concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO) on the environment are a growing concern. The air quality issues of most concern to CAFO vary but generally include ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, particulate matter, volatile organic compounds, greenhouse gases, and odors. Air pollutants may be regulated by federal and state laws or by nuisance complaints. The United States Environmental Protection Agency, and poultry, swine, and dairy industries recently agreed to the National Air Emissions Monitoring System to fund research on atmospheric emissions from production farms in the United States. Air quality regulations may be based on actual emissions, atmospheric concentrations, or human perception, or via limiting the size or location of CAFO. Measuring the concentrations or emissions of most air pollutants is expensive and complex. Because of spatial and temporal variability, concentrations and emissions must be measured continuously over an extended period of time. Because different methods or models can give different results with the same data set, a multitude of methods should be used simultaneously to assure emissions are reasonable. The "best" method to measure concentrations and emissions will depend upon atmospheric concentrations, cost, facility characteristics, objectives, and other factors. In the future, requirements for monitoring of air emissions from CAFO will probably increase. Reliable process-based models need to be developed so that emissions of air pollutants can be estimated from readily obtained diet, animal, facility, and environmental variables. Auditors will need to be trained in a variety of disciplines including animal sciences, chemistry, engineering, micrometeorology, instrumentation, modeling, and logic.
Key words: air quality, concentrated animal feeding operations, dispersion, modeling, regulation
INTRODUCTION
The potential adverse effects of animal feeding operations (AFO) on the environment are a growing concern. The effects of concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO) on water quality have been regulated under the Clean Water Act for many years. However, the effects of intensive and extensive livestock operations on air quality have received less attention at least until recently. Even in rural communities, the general public has become less tolerant of the odors and dust emitted from agriculture because of concerns about health, quality of life, property values, and the environment.
In general, the air pollutants of most concern to livestock operations include ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, particulate matter (PM), volatile...