Why Did That Fancy Aerator
Make My Lagoon Smell WORSE?
by Valerie Anne
Edwards, President Alken-Murray Corp.
| There are aeration system marketing companies
that promise you that all you have to do to fix odor in your lagoon is to
purchase a large expensive aeration system, because aerobic bacteria do
not create nasty odors. So, you harness your resources for a capital expenditure,
figuring that you will recoup from the good relations your odor control
plan will promote in your community. You install the system and you pull
the switch. The motors rumble, the surface bubbles and gunk starts to rise
from the bottom and...and...the stench is overpowering, much worse than
it was before. You turn in horror to the aeration company installer, who
tells you not to worry, just give it some time. Well, you have just spent
a ton of money, so you agree to let it run for awhile, but it does not improve.
Why? |
| When you start up a lagoon without aeration,
depositing semi-liquid waste into it, it stratifies, with only the top layer
receiving any air. The oxygen demand of the waste quickly robs the lower
layers of any oxygen they contained at startup, so obligate anaerobes
(bacteria that cannot function WITH air) are encouraged to proliferate,
while the obligate aerobes (bacteria that cannot function
WITHOUT air) rise to the surface or die off. The level of organic matter
in the lagoon is much greater than the natural initial bacterial population
in the lagoon can handle, so the cycle of breakdown is slowed while the
proportion of strains changes and the new population struggles to catch
up to the tremendous volume of waste. |
| Let's be honest here, you don't find 10,000 hogs
naturally congregating together in a small area in nature. If such a population
assembled in nature, it would quickly denude the land of nutrients and would
die of starvation. So a natural lagoon was not designed to handle the volume
of waste from an animal production facility and must work hard to adapt
to it. Until the hydrogen sulfide volume, produced by obligate anaerobe
Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, becomes so incredible over a period
of time, maybe two to five years, that a large growth of purple sulfur
bacteria is encouraged to develop from the small amounts of these strains
of slow growing, generally obligately anaerobic strains, arriving from the
animal intestines, you will develop a relatively stinky, relatively stable
lagoon, depending on the landscaping and prevailing winds. |
| When you add aeration, you kill off the predominant
obligate anaerobic bacteria (like the aeration man said it would), leaving
only a tiny population of bacteria capable of aerobic respiration (which
the aeration man didn't count on). Digestion halts, the lagoon contents
are stirred up, volatilizing the gases, so it smells much worse. Does this
mean that Alken-Murray opposes aeration? The answer is "Absolutely
not". If you apply the correct species of facultative anaerobes
(bacteria that can function either with or without air), in sufficient quantity
to seed the lagoon and gradually introduce higher levels of aeration,
you can competitively exclude the undesirable strains, while you encourage
a faster, less odorous, and more complete digestion of waste. Although aeration
for a large lagoon is expensive to install and to run,, if you have already
installed the system, Alken-Murray can make it work for you. |