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The Mystery of the Exploding Manure Pits

The only thing worse than a huge stinking pit of manure may be a huge stinking and foaming pit of manure that blows up the barn. Over the past few years, explosions have destroyed several Midwestern pig farms, killing thousands of hogs and causing millions of dollars of damage. Pig farmers and scientists have been at a loss to explain these explosions. Could the culprit be a small microbe?

Methane gas is a natural byproduct of bacteria living in manure pits. It’s odorless (blame hydrogen sulfide for the unpleasant smell), colorless, and just so happens to be very flammable. There has been a recent uptick in reports of foam in these manure pits, rising as high as four feet. What’s trapped in the little bubbles of foam? Methane, of course. With such a high concentration of flammable gas, all it takes is a little spark.

The mystery is why these deep manure pits, standard practice for years, are suddenly foaming over the top. Researchers have noticed a correlation (pdf) between foaming and hogs fed a diet heavy in DDGS, or distiller’s dried grains with solubles. DDGS is the dried leftover mash from making ethanol out of corn. With the dramatic rise of ethanol production in the United States in the past decade thanks to government subsidies, some 3.2 million tons of DDGS is now produced annually. Most of that is fed to cows, but increasingly, also to pigs.

DDGS has a different protein and fat profile than traditional soybean or corn feed, and the FDA has also found significant levels of antibiotics in distiller’s grains. Both of these factors can influence the makeup of the microbial community. Dr. Bo Hu at the University of Minnesota suspects a filamentous bacteria may be the cause of the foaming. His lab is working to identify the bacteria behind it.

Even assuming that this hypothesis is true, we can’t entirely blame a microbe for the problem—after all, it wasn’t they who devised the policy that seems to be giving us tons of excess DDGS and explosive, methane-filled foam.

Image courtesy of MaretH / flickr

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February 14th, 2012 8:26 AM Tags: agriculture, energy, ethanol, explosions, farming, manure, microbiology, pigs
by Sarah Zhang in Environment, Living World | 9 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

9 Responses to “The Mystery of the Exploding Manure Pits”

  1. 1.   scribbler Says:
    February 14th, 2012 at 9:20 am

    Talk about some dangerous sh#t…

    Sorry, someone had to do it…

    ;-)

  2. 2.   Georg Says:
    February 14th, 2012 at 9:49 am

    Are there any regulations on ignition safety around those pits?
    (electric equipment, open fire etc?)

  3. 3.   Greg Says:
    February 14th, 2012 at 11:00 am

    Maybe this is the microbe that methane producers have been looking for or trying to breed!

  4. 4.   Ron Says:
    February 15th, 2012 at 6:47 pm

    Now we have generated millions of btu’s from manure. This is news? Many companies make simple explosion detection equipment to warn when LEL has been acheive. These people are just to damn cheap to purchase the technology.

  5. 5.   Brian Too Says:
    February 15th, 2012 at 8:35 pm

    Of course if that methane can be captured and used, it goes from a hazard to an asset.

    I saw a profile of an enterprising farmer who did just that.

  6. 6.   Iain Says:
    February 15th, 2012 at 9:37 pm

    @4 Mad Max: Thunderdome – entrepernial psycho was methane farming. So bin dere done dat.
    @3 Nope not looking for an igniter, just something that gives better than a 10% energy return.
    @2 Yes.
    @1 Correct. Serious sh#t indeed.

    My opinion? What has changed is always the question to ask when something suddenly goes sideways. This ethanol corn leftovers feed does seem like a good lead. The pigs are lighting their farts now. Why?

  7. 7.   Sharon Says:
    February 16th, 2012 at 4:37 pm

    Does this also happen with horse manure piles?

  8. 8.   Johnny Says:
    February 19th, 2012 at 7:53 am

    For the cost of a 20 dollar ventilation fan, you could easily push that methane outdoors and solve the problem. This problem is easily avoidable and very cheaply fixed.

  9. 9.   Wang-Lo Says:
    February 20th, 2012 at 1:14 pm

    I anticipate a future news item:

    adolescent boys banned from purchasing fireworks

    DDGS available at the chemist or feed store

    middle school lavatory plumbing remains at risk

    -Wang-Lo.

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