Author: Brad Lee
Planning Unit: Plant and Soil Sciences
Major Program: Water and Soil Quality and Conservation
Outcome: Intermediate Outcome
Twenty-nine edge-of-field water quality monitoring stations have been developed to measure continuous nutrient and sediment runoff within row-crop agricultural fields across western Kentucky through a partnership of nine landowners, the Kentucky Soybean Promotion Board, the Kentucky Agricultural Development Board, the USDA NRCS, Kentucky Geological Survey and the College of Agriculture Food and Environment at the University of Kentucky. Over the past year, we have held 4 field days for a total of 488 participants, highlighting agricultural runoff water quality for the public. Audiences included the Junior Red Angus Round-up (07/14/21 - 66 young adults from around the nation), Trigg County farm Tour on (07/22/21 - 274 agricultural producers), University of Kentucky Corn/Soybean/Tobacco Field Day (07/27/21 - 136 agricultural producers) and the Agriculture Water Quality Authority (05/05/22 - 12 agricultural leaders).
Researchers at the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Food and Environment are beginning... Read More
Approximately one million soil test results collected over a 25-year from the Commonwealth revealed ... Read More
During the 1800s up until the early 1900s and during World War II, Kentucky led the nation in indust... Read More
In order for people in eastern Kentucky to have and maintain economic stability (now that coal produ... Read More