Penn State, Lancaster Farmland Trust Receive Chesapeake Bay Grants
The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, in partnership with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Chesapeake Bay Program, announced 24 grants through the Chesapeake Bay Stewardship Fund, including several in Pennsylvania.
 
They include:
 
--Pennsylvania State University will use its $786,384 grant to increase implementation of new technology that applies dry manure on farm fields below the soil surface, rather than on top of the ground. Placing dry manure, which is used as fertilizer, beneath the soil surface improves crops' ability to uptake nutrients while reducing surface nutrient runoff by 90 percent.
 
--Pennsylvania State University received $750,000 grant to coordinate the Conewago Creek Collaborative Conservation Initiative, a public-private partnership formed to reduce nutrient and sediment pollution to Conewago Creek in Pennsylvania. The initiative will help implement on-the-ground restoration measures needed to remove Conewago Creek from the state's 303(d) impaired waters list.
 
--Lancaster Farmland Trust has received $215,000 to research, develop and implement a program that links nutrient credits to conservation easements used to preserve farmland in Lancaster County, Pa. Linking nutrient credits to preserved farms will give the fledgling nutrient credit trading market more stability and increase the confidence of potential credit purchasers.
 

6/12/2009

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