Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

21
ENERGY CONSERVATION: WINDBREAKS, SNOW FENCES AND SHADE BANKS Paul Patterson, Penn State University Department of Animal Science

description

By Paul H. Patterson, Professor of Poultry Science at The Pennsylvania State University.

Transcript of Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Page 1: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

ENERGY CONSERVATION: WINDBREAKS, SNOW FENCESAND SHADE BANKS

Paul Patterson, Penn State UniversityDepartment of Animal Science

Page 2: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks
Page 3: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Demonstrate/Research• Buffers for energy

conservation: – For shade for cooling – As windbreaks/snow fences

to protect barns in winter

Page 4: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Outline• Windbreak• Snow fence• Shade buildings, birds, inlets

Page 5: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Windbreak

Page 6: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Windbreak• Multi-Row Windbreak• Traditional 3 or more

rows of trees and shurbs• Spacing within rows: 6-

15ft deciduous; 6-20ft conifers; 3-6ft shrubs

• Spacing between rows: 12-16ft & for equipment

• Twin-Row High Density• Design uses closer

spacing: 3-4ft shrubs, 6-10ft trees, 5-6ft betw rows.

• Second twin-row (50ft) can be used to trap & store snow

Page 7: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Windbreak• To improve fan performance

Page 8: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Windbreak• For fan performance

Page 9: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Windbreak Plant Materials• Native species, adapted

to climate and soil• Evergreens:– Eastern Red Cedar– Arborvitae– Norway Spruce– Hemlock– Pine

• Deciduous Trees:– Hickory– Oak– Hackberry– Maple– Hybrid Poplar– Honey Locust– Sycamore

Page 10: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Windbreak Plant Materials

• Shrubs:– Willow– Holley– Lilac– Forsythia

• Grasses:– Panicum (switchgrass)– Big bluestem– Miscanthus

Page 11: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Snow Fence

Page 12: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Snow Fence• To prevent drifting snow:– On roofs– At load out doors– Around feed bins– Roads, etc.

Page 13: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Snow Fence• Density: perpendicular & 60-80% density• Height: approx 10X barrier height = snow

deposition distance. Doubling barrier ht increases snow storage 4X.

Page 14: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Snow Fence

Page 15: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Snow Fence• Length: extend beyond house to intercept

winds that deviate 25 degrees from perpendicular

• Plants: preferred species are conifers, shrubs & low growing broadleaf trees. Conifers ideal because of height and year round foliage.

Page 16: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Shade and Cooling Opportunity

Page 17: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks
Page 18: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Inlets

Page 19: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Birds in Organic Housing Systems

Page 20: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks
Page 21: Energy Conservation for Poultry Producers: Windbreaks, Snow Fences, and Shade Banks

Questions