Author: Brad Lee
Planning Unit: Plant and Soil Sciences
Major Program: Water and Soil Quality and Conservation
Outcome: Initial Outcome
Dog excrement, which contains 4.0% nitrogen and 3.1% phosphorus, is one of the primary sources of nutrient runoff that can lead eutrophication of Kentucky’s urban waterways. We developed an outreach program, supported by the Lexington Fayette Urban County Government, to bring awareness to this important issue. As a part of this educational effort, we investigated the impact of signage reminding dog park users to pick up after their pets. A baseline was established by georeferencing the dog excrement piles across four Lexington dog parks on April 26, 2022. Signage was installed by the entrance to each dog park on this date, and the dog excrement piles were georeferenced one year later, April 24, 2023. Data collected indicates that signage at the dog park entrance gates do not impact the number of excrement piles remaining within the dog park.
Staff at the Kentucky Mesonet at Western Kentucky University have been working diligently over sever... Read More
Twenty-nine edge-of-field water quality monitoring stations have been developed to measure continuou... Read More
Specialists involved: Jimmy Henning, Ray Smith, Chris TeutschSheep and goats comprise a small but gr... Read More
Specialists involved: Jimmy Henning, Ray Smith, Chris TeutschProducer leadership of the Kentucky For... Read More