(C) Wisconsin Watch This story was originally published by Wisconsin Watch and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . ‘A sense of urgency’: Farm drainage tile spurs nutrient pollution [1] ['Joy Mazur', 'Columbia Missourian', 'Wisconsin Watch', '.Wp-Block-Co-Authors-Plus-Coauthors.Is-Layout-Flow', 'Class', 'Wp-Block-Co-Authors-Plus', 'Display Inline', '.Wp-Block-Co-Authors-Plus-Avatar', 'Where Img', 'Height Auto Max-Width'] Date: 2024-06-22 11:00:00+00:00 Reading Time: 6 minutes An increased use of agricultural drainage tile is one reason a 2025 deadline to reduce nitrate and phosphorus entering the Gulf of Mexico by 20% is unlikely. Drainage tile, a system farmers use to drain water from croplands, is also a contributor to the historic loss of up to about 100 million acres of wetlands in the U.S., researchers say. This hidden underground pipe system stretches over more than 50 million acres in the U.S., with about 84% of those acres in the upper Midwest. It has become essential to modern agriculture, but it brings devastating environmental consequences. his story is part of the series from the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk called Farm to Trouble. The series examines slow progress on reducing harmful agricultural runoff from the Mississippi River basin, which causes a low-oxygen “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico that threatens wildlife and fisheries. About 98% of drainage tile in the nation is located in watersheds with excess nitrate and phosphorus levels. Tile changes the natural movement of water, serving as a conduit for pollution that is flushed quickly into nearby waterways. Drainage tile is the “main delivery mechanism for nitrates from farm fields to the stream network,” said Chris Jones, a retired hydrologist from the University of Iowa. Before tiles existed, a raindrop might take decades to reach a stream network, Jones said. “Now it’s hours or days.” And researchers and agriculture industry experts say the problem is only getting worse. As climate change drives wetter weather in the Midwest and farmers push for greater productivity, many observers agree that drainage tile use is increasing. Yet in many states, tile goes unmonitored and unregulated. Since tiles are considered a nonpoint source of pollution, which comes from places like farms where water isn’t tested, they also fall outside the reach of the Clean Water Act. The sun shines on Doug Doughty’s fields, highlighting the terraced landscape. These slopes slow water down as it heads from the field into the underground tile system, reducing soil erosion and nutrient runoff. (Courtesy of Doug Doughty) ‘Bottom line is we have to make money’ Harold Beach and his son Chris Beach install drainage tile on their farm in Taylor Township, Missouri. (Courtesy of Harold Beach) For many farmers, the math is simple. Tile costs about $1,850 to $3,700 per acre, an up-front investment that can increase annual crop yields by 5% to 25%. Tile installers bury a system of connected drain pipes under farm fields to transport water to an outlet or ditch. The drains suck excess water out of the soil, giving plants room to breathe and allowing farmers to work their fields sooner. Harold Beach, a farmer in Taylor Township, Missouri, said tile significantly improved his fields and his yields. In a recent video, he and his son, Chris, can be seen driving a tractor that pulls a tile plow along a trench in the middle of a field, feeding long stretches of black pipe into dry soil. Beach said he does worry about nutrient pollution. But he also feels pressure to successfully maintain his farm, which has been in the family for decades. “Bottom line is we have to make money to stay here,” he said. “I’ve got past generations looking down thinking, ‘You better do it right.’” Unregulated tile growth, disappearing wetlands Settlers have been draining the land since the 1800s. John Johnston, a Scotsman with a farm in upstate New York, found dense, wet, mushy clay when he first stuck his shovel in dirt in 1838. He knew it was holding too much moisture, waterlogging his crops and reducing his yields, so he laid thousands of clay pipes by hand to drain the excess water. Johnston’s yield increased from five bushels of wheat per acre to 50 bushels per acre. Soon after, agriculturalists from all over the world wrote to him asking for advice and information. He answered each letter and published articles, inspiring farmers. By the late 1800s, clay tiles were being mass-produced. Drainage tile was embedded into the nation’s soil – and its history. Harold Beach’s son, Chris Beach, sets up a trench before laying drainage tile. Beach said drainage tile significantly improved his crop yields. (Courtesy of Harold Beach) By the 20th century, a quarter of U.S. wetlands had been drained for agricultural use. Once including a 1,500-square-mile stretch called the “Great Black Swamp” in Ohio and Indiana, the Midwest now has less than 5% of its original wetlands left. One of the few federal laws that could govern drainage tile is the “Swampbuster” provision of the Food Security Act. Since 1985, it has prohibited farmers participating in USDA programs from converting wetlands into farmland. But the law may have come too little, too late. Besides the fact that the provision doesn’t apply to farmers not following USDA programs, many wetlands were already drained in the 19th century for agricultural use. And wetlands are still disappearing — a 2019 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service report found that over 220,000 acres of wetlands were lost in the contiguous U.S. between 2009 and 2019. A few states, like South Dakota, Wisconsin and Minnesota, delegate regulation of drainage tile to local authorities. In other states, like Missouri and Iowa, there are no permitting requirements to install drainage tile. “The local officials have no appetite or inclination to start a permitting process,” said John Torbert, executive director of the Iowa Drainage District Association. ‘A direct shot into the streams’ Tile is a major influence on the massive amounts of nitrate that flow into the Gulf of Mexico. About 90% of this nitrate comes from the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers, which are connected to highly tiled states like Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. Researchers say future precipitation changes may increase nitrate loads in some cases. Excess nutrients spur surplus plant and algae growth, which can degrade water quality and deprive other organisms of oxygen. One 2010 study found that tile drains contributed up to 90% of annual nitrate and heavy metal loads from an experimental field to an outlet. Other chemicals, like PFAS (also called “forever chemicals”) and microbial contaminants from manure, can also be transported through tile. Dana Kolpin, research hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Central Midwest Science Center, said tile effectively mainlines contaminants. “They now get basically a direct shot into the streams,” he said. Water collects at a drainage point at the edge of Doug Doughty’s field on June 2, 2024, in Livingston County, Mo. Doughty installed a new terraced drainage system in late April. (Maya Bell for the Ag & Water Desk) Is conservation drainage a solution? Some researchers say new technology can reduce nutrient pollution. Laura Christianson, a researcher in the Department of Soil, Water and Climate at the University of Minnesota, points to bioreactors and saturated buffers as possible options. Bioreactors use a wood-chip-filled trench to filter nitrate out of water from tile. Buffers redirect the water through shrubbery to denitrify it. Both reduce the amount of nitrate going into streams. One study suggested that in about two-thirds of sub-watersheds with high amounts of nitrate, conservation methods on and around farm fields may be the best way to reduce excess runoff. But others say this is a losing game. The Iowa Environmental Council, a nonprofit environmental coalition, found it would take up to 22,000 years to achieve the state’s nutrient reduction plan goals at the current pace of conservation project installation. “Those have not been implemented at a scale that offsets the continued installation of tiled drainage,” said council staff attorney Michael Schmidt. (Joy Mazur / Columbia Missourian) ‘We’re responsible for it’ The way hydrologist Jones sees it, conservation practices work, but there never will be enough to solve the problem. He estimates that one bioreactor treats 40 acres of tile-drained land and costs $15,000 to install, while Iowa has 26 million crop acres. “We could cut down every tree in Iowa, and we wouldn’t have enough wood chips to make all the bioreactors that we need. Nowhere close,” Jones said. “So these really aren’t what we call landscape-scale solutions. They’re sort of Band-Aids that work at the field scale, but they’re not a real policy solution.” Jones said a real policy solution would be for farming to move away from practices that put pollutants into waterways altogether. Doug Doughty feeds his livestock on June 2, 2024, in Livingston County, Mo. In addition to his 1200-acre crop operation, Doughty owns roughly 20 cattle, two horses and a collection of farm cats and dogs. (Maya Bell for the Ag & Water Desk) Farmer Doug Doughty, who raises soybeans, corn and livestock in Livingston County, Missouri, is increasingly concerned about nutrient pollution from farmland. He has built terraced fields, where crops are sectioned out so that some are on higher ground than others. These slopes slow water down as it heads from the field into the underground tile system, reducing soil erosion and nutrient runoff. At age 66, Doughty hopes to preserve the health of his land – and the environment – for the next generation. Doughty has soberly watched the news about increasing Midwestern cancer rates, drinking water contaminated with farm chemicals, and the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico caused by agricultural runoff. “It is obvious that we have a problem here. We’re responsible for it, and we should have more of a sense of urgency when it comes to nutrients leaving our fields,” Doughty said. “There are a lot of good practices out there. And there are farmers that are really working on reducing erosion and reducing nutrient pollution. But it’s not enough yet. It’s not enough because the problem is increasing.” This story is part of the series Farm to Trouble from the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an editorially independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri School of Journalism in partnership with Report For America and funded by the Walton Family Foundation. Wisconsin Watch is a member of the network. Sign up for our newsletter to get our news straight to your inbox. Republish This Story Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license. Close window X Republish this article This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Scroll down to copy and paste the code of our article into your CMS. The codes for images, graphics and other embeddable elements may not transfer exactly as they appear on our site. *** Also, the code below will NOT copy the featured image on the page. You are welcome to download the main image as a separate element for publication with this story. *** You are welcome to republish our articles for free using the following ground rules. Credit should be given, in this format: “By Dee J. Hall, Wisconsin Watch” Editing material is prohibited, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and in-house style (for example, using “Waunakee, Wis.” instead of “Waunakee” or changing “yesterday” to “last week”) Other than minor cosmetic and font changes, you may not change the structural appearance or visual format of a story. If published online, you must include the links and link to wisconsinwatch.org If you share the story on social media, please mention @wisconsinwatch (Twitter, Facebook and Instagram), and ensure that the original featured image associated with the story is visible on the social media post. Don’t sell the story or any part of it — it may not be marketed as a product. Don’t extract, store or resell Wisconsin Watch content as a database. Don’t sell ads against the story. But you can publish it with pre-sold ads. Your website must include a prominent way to contact you. Additional elements that are packaged with our story must be labeled. Users can republish our photos, illustrations, graphics and multimedia elements ONLY with stories with which they originally appeared. You may not separate multimedia elements for standalone use. If we send you a request to change or remove Wisconsin Watch content from your site, you must agree to do so immediately. *** Also, the code below will NOT copy the featured image on the page. You are welcome to download the main image as a separate element for publication with this story. *** You are welcome to republish our articles forusing the following ground rules. For questions regarding republishing rules please contact Jeff Bauer, digital editor and producer, at jbauer@wisconsinwatch.org ‘We should have a sense of urgency’ as farm drainage tile drives nutrient pollution

‘We should have a sense of urgency’ as farm drainage tile drives nutrient pollution

by Joy Mazur / Columbia Missourian, Wisconsin Watch
June 22, 2024

An increased use of agricultural drainage tile is one reason a 2025 deadline to reduce nitrate and phosphorus entering the Gulf of Mexico by 20% is unlikely.

Drainage tile, a system farmers use to drain water from croplands, is also a contributor to the historic loss of up to about 100 million acres of wetlands in the U.S., researchers say.

This hidden underground pipe system stretches over more than 50 million acres in the U.S., with about 84% of those acres in the upper Midwest. It has become essential to modern agriculture, but it brings devastating environmental consequences.

his story is part of the series from the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk called Farm to Trouble. The series examines slow progress on reducing harmful agricultural runoff from the Mississippi River basin, which causes a low-oxygen “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico that threatens wildlife and fisheries.

About 98% of drainage tile in the nation is located in watersheds with excess nitrate and phosphorus levels. Tile changes the natural movement of water, serving as a conduit for pollution that is flushed quickly into nearby waterways.

Drainage tile is the “main delivery mechanism for nitrates from farm fields to the stream network,” said Chris Jones, a retired hydrologist from the University of Iowa.

Before tiles existed, a raindrop might take decades to reach a stream network, Jones said. “Now it’s hours or days.”

And researchers and agriculture industry experts say the problem is only getting worse. As climate change drives wetter weather in the Midwest and farmers push for greater productivity, many observers agree that drainage tile use is increasing.

Yet in many states, tile goes unmonitored and unregulated. Since tiles are considered a nonpoint source of pollution, which comes from places like farms where water isn’t tested, they also fall outside the reach of the Clean Water Act.

Aerial view of farm fields
The sun shines on Doug Doughty’s fields, highlighting the terraced landscape. These slopes slow water down as it heads from the field into the underground tile system, reducing soil erosion and nutrient runoff. (Courtesy of Doug Doughty)

‘Bottom line is we have to make money’

https://videopress.com/v/4UJ0M53B?resizeToParent=true&cover=true&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=true
Harold Beach and his son Chris Beach install drainage tile on their farm in Taylor Township, Missouri. (Courtesy of Harold Beach)

For many farmers, the math is simple. Tile costs about $1,850 to $3,700 per acre, an up-front investment that can increase annual crop yields by 5% to 25%.

Tile installers bury a system of connected drain pipes under farm fields to transport water to an outlet or ditch. The drains suck excess water out of the soil, giving plants room to breathe and allowing farmers to work their fields sooner.

Harold Beach, a farmer in Taylor Township, Missouri, said tile significantly improved his fields and his yields. In a recent video, he and his son, Chris, can be seen driving a tractor that pulls a tile plow along a trench in the middle of a field, feeding long stretches of black pipe into dry soil.

Beach said he does worry about nutrient pollution. But he also feels pressure to successfully maintain his farm, which has been in the family for decades.

“Bottom line is we have to make money to stay here,” he said. “I’ve got past generations looking down thinking, ‘You better do it right.’”

Unregulated tile growth, disappearing wetlands

Settlers have been draining the land since the 1800s. John Johnston, a Scotsman with a farm in upstate New York, found dense, wet, mushy clay when he first stuck his shovel in dirt in 1838. He knew it was holding too much moisture, waterlogging his crops and reducing his yields, so he laid thousands of clay pipes by hand to drain the excess water.

Johnston’s yield increased from five bushels of wheat per acre to 50 bushels per acre. Soon after, agriculturalists from all over the world wrote to him asking for advice and information. He answered each letter and published articles, inspiring farmers. By the late 1800s, clay tiles were being mass-produced. Drainage tile was embedded into the nation’s soil – and its history.

A man in an orange shirt in a trench
Harold Beach’s son, Chris Beach, sets up a trench before laying drainage tile. Beach said drainage tile significantly improved his crop yields. (Courtesy of Harold Beach)

By the 20th century, a quarter of U.S. wetlands had been drained for agricultural use. Once including a 1,500-square-mile stretch called the “Great Black Swamp” in Ohio and Indiana, the Midwest now has less than 5% of its original wetlands left.

One of the few federal laws that could govern drainage tile is the “Swampbuster” provision of the Food Security Act. Since 1985, it has prohibited farmers participating in USDA programs from converting wetlands into farmland.

But the law may have come too little, too late. Besides the fact that the provision doesn’t apply to farmers not following USDA programs, many wetlands were already drained in the 19th century for agricultural use.

And wetlands are still disappearing — a 2019 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service report found that over 220,000 acres of wetlands were lost in the contiguous U.S. between 2009 and 2019.

A few states, like South Dakota, Wisconsin and Minnesota, delegate regulation of drainage tile to local authorities. In other states, like Missouri and Iowa, there are no permitting requirements to install drainage tile.

“The local officials have no appetite or inclination to start a permitting process,” said John Torbert, executive director of the Iowa Drainage District Association.

https://pym.nprapps.org/pym.v1.min.jsvar pymRunoffTileMap=new pym.Parent("g-2024-runoff-tile-map","https://agwaterdesk.github.io/2024-runoff-tile-map/",{})

‘A direct shot into the streams’

Tile is a major influence on the massive amounts of nitrate that flow into the Gulf of Mexico.

About 90% of this nitrate comes from the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers, which are connected to highly tiled states like Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. Researchers say future precipitation changes may increase nitrate loads in some cases.

Excess nutrients spur surplus plant and algae growth, which can degrade water quality and deprive other organisms of oxygen. One 2010 study found that tile drains contributed up to 90% of annual nitrate and heavy metal loads from an experimental field to an outlet.

Other chemicals, like PFAS (also called “forever chemicals”) and microbial contaminants from manure, can also be transported through tile.

Dana Kolpin, research hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Central Midwest Science Center, said tile effectively mainlines contaminants. “They now get basically a direct shot into the streams,” he said.

Water is at the bottom of two pipes amid greenery.
Water collects at a drainage point at the edge of Doug Doughty’s field on June 2, 2024, in Livingston County, Mo. Doughty installed a new terraced drainage system in late April. (Maya Bell for the Ag & Water Desk)

Is conservation drainage a solution?

Some researchers say new technology can reduce nutrient pollution. Laura Christianson, a researcher in the Department of Soil, Water and Climate at the University of Minnesota, points to bioreactors and saturated buffers as possible options.

Bioreactors use a wood-chip-filled trench to filter nitrate out of water from tile. Buffers redirect the water through shrubbery to denitrify it. Both reduce the amount of nitrate going into streams.

One study suggested that in about two-thirds of sub-watersheds with high amounts of nitrate, conservation methods on and around farm fields may be the best way to reduce excess runoff.

But others say this is a losing game. The Iowa Environmental Council, a nonprofit environmental coalition, found it would take up to 22,000 years to achieve the state’s nutrient reduction plan goals at the current pace of conservation project installation.

“Those have not been implemented at a scale that offsets the continued installation of tiled drainage,” said council staff attorney Michael Schmidt.

(Joy Mazur / Columbia Missourian)

‘We’re responsible for it’

The way hydrologist Jones sees it, conservation practices work, but there never will be enough to solve the problem. He estimates that one bioreactor treats 40 acres of tile-drained land and costs $15,000 to install, while Iowa has 26 million crop acres.

“We could cut down every tree in Iowa, and we wouldn’t have enough wood chips to make all the bioreactors that we need. Nowhere close,” Jones said. “So these really aren’t what we call landscape-scale solutions. They’re sort of Band-Aids that work at the field scale, but they're not a real policy solution.”

Jones said a real policy solution would be for farming to move away from practices that put pollutants into waterways altogether.

A man holds a bucket over a fence next to cattle.
Doug Doughty feeds his livestock on June 2, 2024, in Livingston County, Mo. In addition to his 1200-acre crop operation, Doughty owns roughly 20 cattle, two horses and a collection of farm cats and dogs. (Maya Bell for the Ag & Water Desk)

Farmer Doug Doughty, who raises soybeans, corn and livestock in Livingston County, Missouri, is increasingly concerned about nutrient pollution from farmland.

He has built terraced fields, where crops are sectioned out so that some are on higher ground than others. These slopes slow water down as it heads from the field into the underground tile system, reducing soil erosion and nutrient runoff.

At age 66, Doughty hopes to preserve the health of his land – and the environment – for the next generation.

Doughty has soberly watched the news about increasing Midwestern cancer rates, drinking water contaminated with farm chemicals, and the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico caused by agricultural runoff.

“It is obvious that we have a problem here. We're responsible for it, and we should have more of a sense of urgency when it comes to nutrients leaving our fields,” Doughty said. “There are a lot of good practices out there. And there are farmers that are really working on reducing erosion and reducing nutrient pollution. But it's not enough yet. It's not enough because the problem is increasing.”

This story is part of the series Farm to Trouble from the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an editorially independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri School of Journalism in partnership with Report For America and funded by the Walton Family Foundation. Wisconsin Watch is a member of the network. Sign up for our newsletter to get our news straight to your inbox.

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