Royer, an environmental lawyer who grew up on his family’s poultry farm in Lancaster County, likes to say that we all contribute to nutrient pollution. We all use the bathroom, and rely on wastewater treatment, and eat farm-raised foods, and depend on the roads and paved surfaces that convey storm water into our streams. But in an agricultural state like Pennsylvania, the largest single source of nutrient pollution is the runoff of nitrogen and phosphorus from fertilizers applied to farm fields: nutrients that are vital for plant growth, but that in excess create blooms of algae that eat up oxygen and choke aquatic life.
These nutrients seep into groundwater and creeks, fouling drinking water and killing fish. The sediments that carry them coat stream beds, smothering habitat for insects and other creatures at the low end of the food chain. The pollution flows on into larger tributaries, proceeding downstream to join the Susquehanna River. Eventually, much of what washes from Pennsylvania’s fields winds up in the Chesapeake Bay.
Land to Water
With some 64,000 square miles of land draining into a shallow, narrow body of water just 200 miles long, the Chesapeake is in some respects a worst-case scenario. “The land-to-water ratio dwarfs that of almost every other water body in the world,” Royer says.
The Bay watershed, home to 18 million people, spreads out across six states and the District of Columbia. It includes almost two-thirds of Pennsylvania, which supplies fully half of the Bay’s freshwater flow and the largest share of its agricultural pollution.
Soil scientists and environmental engineers, wetlands ecologists, extension agents and others, including many at Penn State, have been working on this problem since the 1980s. One outcome of their efforts has been the establishment of a set of best practices for farmers: steps aimed at limiting fertilizer use, maintaining soil health, and managing the storage of manure. “The idea was that if we put a lot of these best practices into place, we’d solve our environmental problem,” says James Shortle, distinguished professor of agricultural and environmental economics. But the results have been mixed at best.
Part of the problem is limited resources. Because most Pennsylvania farms—large confined animal operations are the exception—are not regulated under the federal Clean Water Act, the state has relied heavily on incentives to convince farmers to adopt conservation measures. “The spending for this has been enormous,” Shortle says, “and the reductions in pollution not that much.”