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Soil
Water
Conservation District |
|
Malheur County Best Management Practices
in cooperation with the Malheur
Watershed Council
and the Owyhee Watershed Council
·Aesthetics
·Protect riparian forest buffers from erosion and sediment
·As part of a riparian forest buffer system.
·As part of an agricultural waste management system.
·At the lower end of surface irrigated crop fields to trap sediment and sediment attached contaminants from furrow irrigation erosion.
·As
part of a cropland management system that includes improving or establishing
wildlife habitat.
Conservation management system
Filter strips are normally established as part of a conservation management system to address the soil, water, air, plant and animal needs and the owner's objectives.It is important on cropland to plan the conservation crop rotation, nutrient and pestmanagement, and other cropland practices.Filter strips can also provide forage production, wildlife habitat and improve farm aesthetics.They are most effective when used in combination with other agronomic or structural practices to provide conservation benefits.
·Inspect and repair after storm events to fill in gullies, remove flow disrupting sediment accumulation, re-seed disturbed areas, and take measures to prevent concentrated flow in the filter strip.
·Lime and fertilize according to soil test recommendations.
·Exclude livestock and vehicular traffic from the filter strip during wet periods of the year since filter strips rely on infiltration for reducing contaminants.It is recommended that this type of traffic be excluded at all times to the extent that it is practical.
·Restoration is required once the filter strip has accumulated so much sediment that it is no longer effective.
Malheur Agricultural Experiment
Station
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Last updated Wednesday July 7, 2004 .