HomeMy WebLinkAboutBack-Up DocumentsCommon Misconceptions About Fertilizer Ordinances
Summertime Blackout Periods and Mori.-
1.
ori_.
1. We don't need a fertilizer ordinance, do we?
Yes, we do! Fertilizers contain nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus to make plants
grow, but when too much fertilizer is applied to the land, it runs off into our waterways
and can cause big problems like algae blooms. Algae blooms can kill wildlife, smother
seagrass, turn our beautiful blue water green, and can become harmful to human health.
Biscayne Bay is particularly sensitive to algae blooms, and data shows we are at a tipping
point where more nutrients will start causing serious blooms. 85 other municipalities
and 32 other counties in the State of Florida have already passed ordinances to restrict
fertilizer use in some way. Miami Dade County is one of the last counties in Florida
without a fertilizer ordinance. This proposed fertilizer ordinance was specifically
developed with Southeast Florida in mind.
2. Is this ban on using fertilizer in my garden?
No, this is not a fertilizer ban. You will still be able to use fertilizers. Specifically, this
ordinance would create a setback from water bodies to reduce how much fertilizer gets
into our waterways. It also limits how much and which kind of fertilizer you can use; we
recommend slow release varieties. These recommendations will prevent you from using
too much and wasting fertilizer. This ordinance will also include a blackout period on
fertilizer use during the rainiest months of the summer, when our yards don't need
fertilizer anyway.
3. Will it cost me more?
A fertilizer ordinance with a summer rainy season blackout will not cost you more. In
fact, it may save you money in the long -run because you are not applying fertilizer that
goes to waste when lost to heavy rainfall.
4. Do Community Members have to take the Best Management Practices (BMP)
training?
No. Community members are not required to take the BMP training. While anyone is
welcome to attend to learn more, the trainings are meant to serve as education for
commercial applicators (landscapers) on fertilizer use.
5. Will they be enforcing fertilizer use on my property?
If passed, this ordinance will be a part of the municipal code and will be enforced just
like any other part of the code. The primary focus for enforcement will be on
Commercial applicators.
6. Will my fertilizer be confiscated?
Your fertilizer will not be confiscated.
7. Will my lawn die during the summer?
Your lawn will not die due to nutrient deficiency during the summer. This is because
there is no dormant growth season in South Florida. What this means is that plant
nutrient requirements are spread out throughout the year, requiring lower
concentrations of nutrients overall.
PROTECT OUR RESOURCES...
FOR GENERATIONS TO COME
Florida attracts visitors and residents alike. We all enjoy the
recreational opportunities afforded by springs, beaches, rivers,
forests, and prairies. And the state is a gardener's paradise, offer-
ing nearly twelve months of horticultural productivity.
But Florida's rapid population growth presents challenges. Loss
of wildlife habitat, water pollution, and the increasing demand
placed on a limited water supply threaten the natural resources
that brought us here.
Now, more than ever, it is time to make choices that protect the
health and beauty of Florida. Those choices start right in your
home landscape.
Florida's springs (pictured above) offer wildlife habitat and recreational
opportunity, but they are increasingly threatened by pollution. Florida -
Friendly landscapingr"' practices help protect Florida's water resources
from contamination.
Swales (dips) and berms (rises) help slow, the runoff of siormwater from a
landscape. The water perco-
lates through the soil and is fil-
tered by turfgross before B
reaches the underground reser-
�.
voir called the aquifer. Porous*►'.,
x
pavers (pictured right), like
�-
mulch and —shed shell, also
; p
allow runoff to seep into the
earth instead of carrying debris
into nearby water bodies.
- - -
Or contact the FPL State office at:
(352) 273-4518
http://fvn.ifas.ufl.edu
E-mail: jyneitas.un.edu
The Cooperative Extension Service is a partnership between the
University of Florida and your local county government.
FIND OUT HOW TO CONVERT YOUR YARD TO A
FLORIDA -FRIENDLY LANDSCAPE TODAY!
Visit Publications at: htto://fyn,ifas.uH.edu
0 E4OY
Florida -Friendly
Landscaping-..,..
Solutions for Your Yard
OUR YARDS AND
COMMUNITY LANDSCAPES
The first line
of defense.
Every year, thousands
of Floridians turn to
their county's UFlIFAS
Extension office for
advice from trained
horticultural staff and
master gardener
volunteers. UFAFAS
Extension can teach
you to design and
aC.
maintain an attractive home landscape that uses minimal water,
fertilizer, and pesticides.
Florida Yards & Neighborhoods (FIN) is a public education and
outreach program for homeowners. As part of the Florida -
Friendly Landscaping— (FFL) Program, it is offered statewide
through most UFAF.AS Extension offices.
Help is just a phone call away and your county Extension office is a
wealth of information. Signage at the Citrus County Extension office
(pictured below) teaches visitors about the nine Florida -Friendly
Landscaping'^' principles.
Contact your county Extension office at flint://solutionsforvoudifa.ifas.J.
edu/moD/ to find a schedule of FFL workshops. Learn how to build a com-
post bin, build and install a rain barrel (pictured above), plant a veg-
etable garden, calibrate your sprinlder system, and much more! Phone:
(352) 273-4518 or visit the web site: http://fvn.i6s.u9.eelu. Please visit
our web site to find your county Extension office.
THE NINE PRINCIPLES
The nine Florido-Friendly Landscaping""' principles emphasize
sustainable landscaping choices.
#1
RIGHT PLANT,
RIGHT PLACE
Nelect plants suited for a specific location. Plants in the right
place will thrive on minimal amounts of water, fertilizer, and pes-
ticides.
#2
WATER
EFFICIENTLY
Irrigate only when your lawn and landscape show wilt signs-.
Water during cooler times of day, and check your irrigation system
regularly for leaks and clogs.
#3
FERTILIZE
APPROPRIATELY
t'
Apply fertilizers with at least 30% slow-release nitrogen (N) at the
right times and in the right amounts to prevent leaching and
runoff into ground- and surface waters. Never fertilize before a
heavy rain.
MULCH
Maintain a 2-3layer of mulch on landscape beds to retain soil
moisture, prevent erosion, and suppress weed germination.
#5
ATTRACT
WILDLIFE
Choose plants with fruits or berries to attract birds and other pollinators.
Leave snags and increase vertical layering to provide wildlife habitat
� FjMANAGE R
PESTS
O
Practice Integrated Pest Management (IPM) for a healthy, sustain-
able approach to keeping your landscape safe from pest insects.
#7
RECYCLE
Return valuable n utrients to the soil and reduce waste dispersal by com-
pos ing grass clippings, raked leaves, and pruned tree and plant parte
#8
REDUCE
STORMWATER
RUNOFF
Use features like earth shaping and rain gardens to keep rainwater
on your landscape, rather than letting it rum off into storm drains,
carrying fertilizers, pesticides, soil, and other debris.
PROTECT
WATERFRONT
Protect the water body you live on from chemicals and debris.
Designate a 10' maintenance -free zone between the shoreline and your
landscape and do not fertilize, mow, or apply pesticides in that area.
GI -BMP Training & Program Overview
https://ffl.ifas.ufl.edu/professionals/BMP overview.htm
What Are The GI-BMPs?
The GI-BMPs are a science -based educational program for Green Industry workers (lawn -care and
landscape maintenance professionals), brought to you by OF -IFAS Florida -Friendly LandscapingTM
program. The GI-BMPs teach environmentally safe landscaping practices that help conserve and
protect Florida's ground and surface waters. They can also save the Florida homeowner money,
time, and effort; increase the beauty of the home landscape; and protect the health of your family,
pets, and the environment.
This training is designed to provide corporate, governmental, environmental, and other personnel the
Best Management Practices for lawn and landscape. Learn what impact the BMPs will have on your
business or municipality. Developed by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and
endorsed by the pest control industry, this training is brought to you by OF -IFAS Florida -Friendly
Landscaping program with partial funding by FDEP through a Nonpoint Source Management
(Section 319h) grant from USEPA.
Who Gets Trained in the GI-BMPs?
Florida Statute 482.1562 states that all commercial fertilizer applicators must have a license from the
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) by January 1, 2014. To get this
license, each Green Industry worker must be trained in the GI-BMPs and receive a certificate of
completion from OF/IFAS and FDEP. Additionally, many non-commercial Green Industry applicators
or other workers are required to pass the training by local ordinances or voluntarily participate in the
program to better serve their clients.
. • - _%
t I *`'' MIAMI
WATERKEEPER
July 22, 2019
To: Interested Municipalities
RE: Scientific Support for Fertilizer Regulation
Does my area need a fertilizer ordinance? Yes!
Residential lawn fertilization is estimated to be the second largest source of household nitrogen in the
US (Souto et al. 2019). Excess nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorous, that come in most fertilizers,
can pollute waterways and cause environmental problems such as algae blooms. Algae blooms kill
wildlife, are harmful to humans, smother seagrass, and turn our beautiful blue water green. Biscayne
Bay is already starting to suffer from algae blooms and seagrass die -offs. Therefore, it's more critical
now than ever to reduce land-based pollution. Reducing the use of residential fertilizer can improve our
waterways and will help to keep Biscayne Bay blue!
In Florida, 85 municipalities and 32 counties have been passed fertilizer ordinances since 2007. Just over
half of municipal ordinances include rainy season bans. Miami -Dade is one of the last regions without
an ordinance.
Do fertilizer ordinances improve water quality?
While fertilizer application is only one of many nutrient inputs into waterways (others include septic
tanks, sewage, pet waste, and more), fertilizer ordinances have been shown to be effective in reducing
nutrient inputs. Several studies and municipalities have confirmed that land-based fertilizers are getting
into the waterways (Tampa Bay Estuary Program 2008). Teasing out the factors that contribute to
nutrients in the water is a complicated science, and much more work needs to be done. It can also take
years of having an ordinance enacted to be able to see statistical trends.
Here's what we know so far:
Pinellas County adopted the strictest fertilizer ordinance in the state in 2010, which included a
summertime ban on sales of fertilizer. They have documented improved water quality and water clarity,
which their County supervisor attributes, at least in part, to the strict ordinance and accompanying
education program (Kelli Hammer Levy, Pinellas County, presentation for FSA 2017). Similarly,
Manatee County documented significant water quality improvements after implementing a strict
ordinance and a summer ban (but no sale ban) and presented the graphs below at a Commission meeting
in March 2018 (see figures below). Lee County also undertook a study of nutrients and algae pre and
post a strict fertilizer ordinance based on 2009-2011 conditions, showing a water quality improvement.
These and other improvements have been credited almost entirely to the fertilizer ordinances (Beever
2016).
1
Fertilizer ordinances have worked in other places in the County, too. In the City of Ann Arbor, MI, a
fertilizer ordinance was implemented and showed a 20% decrease in nutrient levels. (adapted from Souto
et al. 2019, citing Lehman et al., 2009, 2011). Communities like Manatee County and HOA's have also
reported cost savings from fertilizer use reduction and improved economic benefits from their waterways
as a result of the ordinances (Manatee County March 2018 presentation, e.g.).
IVIC-Inatee County Fertilizer e
Surface Water Quality Pre & Post -Ordinance
2
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Why is a rainy season ban an important part of a fertilizer ordinance?
Summer in Florida, and especially in Miami -Dade, is very rainy. Therefore, fertilizer applied during the
summer months is highly likely to runoff into waterways. This means wasted money spent on fertilizer
and too much fertilizer pollution in our water. Unlike other areas of Florida, we have no dormant growing
PA
season in Miami-Dade. That means that grass grows all year, so we can avoid fertilizer in the summer
when it rains the most, while still enjoying green and healthy lawns.
While some people have suggested that there is no evidence that summer bans work to improve water
quality, they still acknowledge that fertilizer runoff is the highest in the summer months with the most
rainfall (LJF-IFAS Publication SL 283).
Many of the studies cited in this publication are performed by turfgrass industry specialists who are
optimizing for lawn case, not for water quality impacts. Many of the studies that show little to no runoff
after fertilization are in research settings with only a low amount of allowed fertilizer was applied (e.g.
Erickson et al 2001). Also, none of these studies were done in Miami-Dade, which has unique rainfall
and temperatures and soil compositions from the rest of the state. One article by Dr. Trenholm (2010),
also an author of LJF-IFAS Publication SL 283, states specifically, "These results are based on North
Florida conditions and do not apply to South Florida."
Should we try a weak fertilizer ordinance as a first step?
We don't recommend that as a positive step. Weak fertilizer ordinances, for example, those that do not
include rainy season bans, have been shown not improve water quality, educate the public, or change
behavior effectively.
Souto et al. 2019 collected residential awareness, knowledge and behavior data as well as stormwater
and pond water nitrogen concentrations and loads in three counties where varying urban fertilizer
ordinances were in place. The study found that in the county with the strictest fertilizer control ordinance,
residents were more aware of the ordinance and they were applying fertilizer less frequently. In the
county with the least restrictive ordinance, residents were applying fertilizer more frequently and
nitrogen loads were higher.
The practical fact is that weak fertilizer ordinances without summer bans are very difficult to enforce.
Merely recommending that landscapers and homeowners do not apply immediately before a storm, or
only after testing, are impractical. In Miami-Dade during the rainy season, we have almost daily, high-
volume rainstorms. Engineer Dr. Harvey Harper said, "there is no way to predict if heavy rainfall will
occur during the next two days; if there is no reasonable way to predict if a heavy rainfall event will
occur, then a blackout period would be significantly more effective".
Both Charlotte and Martin counties updated/strengthened their ordinances after the adoption of initial
weaker ordinances. Only Naples has repealed a strict fertilizer ordinance to go back to an ordinance with
no summer ban. However, they are now in the process of re-implementing their strict ban because they
found aweaker ban almost impossible to enforce, and they found that the rainy season bans worked. The
City of Naples found that their 2008 stringent fertilizer ordinance was a "contributing factor for the
decrease of Total Nitrogen trend observed in Naples Bay" (Cardo 2015).
3
Will my community have brown lawns because of a fertilizer ordinance?
No. Communities around Florida have implemented fertilizer ordinances, including summer bans, since
2007. Some early ordinances even banned the sale of fertilizer entirely in the rainy season. None of
these communities have reported issues with lawn aesthetics or increased use of fertilizer at other times
of the year. None of these communities have repealed or weakened their laws since their enactment.
Lawn care specialists have concurred that lawns remain perfectly healthy without summer fertilization
(Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County. 2010. Technical Support Document
for Proposed Local Fertilizer Rule — Chapter 1-15.) The Florida Yards and Neighborhoods Handbook
suggests that applying chelated iron or iron sulfate (without nitrogen or phosphorous) will keep a lawn
green and healthy. Rather, many communities have gone back and strengthened their ordinances after
implementing weaker versions (e.g. Hillsborough, Naples in progress). Some opponents of fertilizer
bans have asserted that bans will yield unhealthy grasses that actually leach more nutrients during the
rest of the year. However, they provide no evidence to support the idea that summertime bans will result
in unhealthy grasses that have high leaching rates. This also has not been reported to be an issue by any
of the 45 municipalities that have passed summertime bans, stretching back to 2007.
Citations
Beever, LB (2016) 2014 Watershed Summit: our vision in action. Biological Sciences 79: 58-68.
Cardo. Naples Bay Water Quality and Biological Analysis 2015. Prepared for The City of Naples.
J. E. Erickson,* J. L. Cisar, J. C. Volin, and G. H. Snyder. (2001) Comparing Nitrogen Runoff and
Leaching between Newly Established St. Augustinegrass Turf and an Alternative Residential
Landscape. Crop Sci. 41:1889-1895.
Harper, H. H. 2014. Florida Fertilizer Ordinances —The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. Florida
Stormwater Association 2014 Annual
Hochmuth G et al. (2009) Unintended consequences Associated with Certain Urban Fertilizer
Ordinances. OF -IFAS Publication SL 283.
Leesa A. Souto, Claudia M.C.S. Listopad, Patrick J. Bohlen (2019). Forging linkages between social
drivers and ecological processes in the residential landscape.
https!/do i.org/l 0.1016/j. landurbp Ian.2019.01.002
Manatee County Presentation to Commission (March 2018) Manatee County Landscape Maintenance
& Fertilizer Regulation.
Levy Hammer, K. (2017) How Much is Enough? Improving Water Quality Through Source Controls.
Pinellas County.
L. Trenholm (2012) Nitrate Leaching Studies. Florida Turf Digest
4
Tampa Bay Estuary Program. (2008a). Model -Based Estimates of Nitrogen Load Reductions
Associated with Fertilizer Restriction Implementation. Technical Report #07-08 of the Tampa Bay
Estuary Program. Retrieved from
httpsJ/u�°��,,kv.tbeptech.or./TBSP TECH PUBS/2008./TBSP 07 08 Final Reduction Credits TBSP
Regional Fertilizer Guideline Recommendations.pdf.
Tampa Bay Estuary Program. (2008b). Tampa Bay Model Regional Fertilizer Ordinance. Technical
Report #06-08 of the Tampa Bay Estuary Program. Retrieved from
https•Ifruww.tbeptech.org/TBEP TECH PUBS/2008/TBSP 06 08 Model Regional Fertilizer Ordin
ance.pdf
5
f
MIAMI
WATERKEEPER
January 7, 2020
To: Interested Municipalities
RE: Scientific Support for South Florida Regional Recommendations of Fertilizer Application
To Whom It May Concern:
Residential lawn fertilization is estimated to be the second largest source of household nitrogen in
the US (Souto et al. 2019). Excess nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, that come in most
fertilizers can pollute waterways and cause environmental problems such as algae blooms. Algae
blooms kill wildlife, are harmful to humans, smother seagrass, and turn our beautiful blue water
green. Biscayne Bay is already starting to suffer from algae blooms and seagrass die -offs.
Therefore, it's more critical now than ever to reduce land-based pollution. Reducing the use of
residential fertilizer can improve our waterways and will help to keep Biscayne Bay blue!
In Florida, 85 municipalities and 32 counties have been passed fertilizer ordinances since 2007.
Just over half of municipal ordinances include rainy season bans.
I. The Case for a Southeast Florida -specific Ordinance
Differences in temperature, rainfall, soil composition, geology, plant hardiness, and other factors
suggest that Southeast Florida requires fertilizer application rates that differ somewhat from other
areas of the state.
For example, The City of Miami has elevations ranging from sea level to 25 feet. The area once
supported extensive southern slash pine forests and islands of tropical hardwood hammocks. The
northern part of the region is a plain of pine flatwoods and wet prairie, with coastal sand ridges,
scrub vegetation, and sand pine. Miami soils overlay limestone, which is rich in calcium carbonate.
These soils are non -sandy, coarse, and silt textured. The soils are highly acidic; calibration of
nutrients for these soils is a completely different process than with organic soils, as acidic soils
interact with nutrients, while organic soils retain the nutrients. The USDA has designated a zone
for Plant Hardiness specific to Miami -Dade County due to these unique climatological and
geologic conditions.
In contrast, Manatee County and Sarasota County are both south of Tampa Bay. They are located
on the Southwestern Flatlands on the Gulf Coast, the west coast of Florida. Elevations range from
sea level to 125 feet. These areas have soils which are also sandy and acidic, but have an additional
component: decaying organic material. This material imparts nutrients to the soil as it decays,
making the soil ideal for planting, especially as it absorbs nutrients that are added. The USDA
Plant Hardiness Zone for this area reflects plants that can tolerate colder temperatures than those
in the subtropical climate of Southeast Florida.
II. Regional Nutrient Studies as Basis for Recommendations
In 2008, the Tampa Bay Estuary Program's Nitrogen Management Consortium produced a detailed
scientific report called the Tampa Bay Residential Stormwater Quality Evaluation. This study
included site-specific data collected from stormwater runoff, surface water retention ponds,
residential irrigation systems, and soil nutrient data. This study further measured residential
landscape management practices and knowledge, average nitrogen loads, fertilizer inputs to
community nutrient budgets, and nutrient concentrations in water samples. After taking this in-
depth look at sources of nutrients, the Consortium made strategic management recommendations
including a Tampa Bay Model Regional Fertilizer Ordinance with specific -nutrient limitations
based on the study.
Miami Dade County does not have such a robust and detailed nutrient budget for Biscayne Bay
and surrounding waterways upon which fertilizer nutrient -limitations could be based. Instead, the
recommendations in the Miami Dade Model Ordinance reflect known climate, soil, and geologic
conditions for the region.
III. Support for Southeast Florida -Specific Recommendations
Due to the uniqueness of Southeast Florida's watershed, geologic features, soil types, and climatic
conditions, specific nutrient limitations are recommended in any municipal fertilizer regulation.
Below is a chart from the Florida Administrative Code (FAC) outlining recommendations for
Nitrogen (N) application based on each region of the state.
ale 5 FertgraA n glrrl Wbm for esi3lblished vfgrass lams in f m regitm d Fbrkb
Nlfmgen momrnenddiom IIbs N / 1 DCO fry ! earl'
SPHcFeas north Centrdl
South
,3aF = 2-3 2-4
24
B ermucla 3-5 4-6
5-7
Cennpecle 1-2 2-3
2-3
51. AugLdne 2-4 2-5
A— i
DYSla 3-5 3-6
4tti
' Wfh Awdlo Is ral of Coma. Ce-11ral Fkrrkb Is dekwd as savor of Ooda Io a line eAmcling hurn'WFo Beadle Io Tampa. 504 Fiorldc
Inc adeS the remyning souHEn pwim d to slob_
Table 5, Florida Fertilizer Rule, Florida Administrative Code 5E-1.003(2).
As we have not yet characterized Biscayne Bay in the way the Tampa Bay study did, laying out a
clear nutrient reduction plan for Gulf Coast counties, we cannot, without careful analysis of our
own watershed, adopt recommendations in Miami -Dade County specifically tailored for another
region of the state. Southeast Florida's soils are different. The plants are different; the climate is
different, and the needs are different. The recommendations in the Florida Administrative Code,
based on studies from the University of Florida IFAS, represent a middle ground.
IV. Next steps: A Biscayne Bay nutrient study, with budgeting and reduction
recommendations
There is existing scientific literature that has analyzed Biscayne Bay and the surrounding
watershed as it relates to nutrient loads and water quality. However, there is no one study as holistic
as the Tampa Bay study upon which specific recommendations for fertilization could be based.
These studies and many others can be the starting point for characterization of Biscayne Bay to
the degree that Tampa Bay was evaluated. If we build on the work that is already being done in
our own backyard, we can establish a baseline of what we know and what remains to be known to
develop a well -tailored, City of Miami -specific ordinance.
A regional nutrient study is recommended as a next step for Southeast Florida in order to better
guide fertilizer regulation and best management practices in the future, as well as to be able to
better measure change over time from baseline conditions and overall efficacy of municipal
fertilizer regulation.
V. Resources
USDA Florida hardiness zone map
USDA Plant Hardiness Zones - Florida
SOUTHEAST SOUTH (St)
1 Dade
2 Browardss�
34
44 45
3
SOUTHEAST NORTH (S3)
31
33 38 39
3 Palm Beach
GENTRAL EAST (CE)
PANHANDLE (PH)
30 29
19 Martin
50 Taylor
8a
10-15 (F)
37
4 Monroe
70 Okeechobee
51 Madison
" 26 2 e 3s
21 St. Lucie
52 Jefferson
8b
15-20 (F)
25 as
5 Collier
22 Indian River
35 Orange
53 Wakulla
's
8 Hendry
23 Osceola
36 Seminole
54 Leon
9a
20-25 (F]
15 16 17 23
7 Lee
8 Sarasota
24 Brevard
37 ifolusia
55 Franklin
9b
25-3{) (F)
,z ,s
9 De Sato
38 Putnam
56 Liberty
,4
10 Charlotte
NORTHWEST {N4Y}
39 Flagler
57 Gadsen
■ 10a
30-35 (F)
a e
25 Hernando
40 Suwannee
58 Suit
o ,1
11 Mades
26 Sumter
41 Columbia
59 Calhoun■
1Ob
35 d4 (F}
7 6
27 Lake
42 Union
60 Jackson
12 Manatee
28 Citrus
43 Bradford
61 Bay
11a
40-45 (F)
s
13 Hardee
29 Marian
44 Clay
62 Washington
14 Highlands
30 Levy
45 St Johns
63 Holmes
15 Pinellas
31 Dixie
46 Hamilton
64 Walton
16 Hillsborough
32 Gilchrist
47 Baker
65 Okaloosa
17 Polk
33 Alachua
48 Nassau
66 Santa Rosa
r
18 Paseo
34 Lafayette
49 Duval
67 Escambia
Lake Regions of Florida (map) - Glenn Griffith (US EPA), Daniel Canfield, Jr. (University of
Florida), Christine Horsburgh (University of Florida), James Omernik (US EPA), Sandra Azevedo
(OAO Corp.)
http://www.tampabay.wateratlas.usf. edu/upload/documents/Florida-Lake-Regions-Map.pdf
Tampa Bay Model Regional Fertilizer Ordinance
http://www.tampabay.wateratlas.usf.edu/upload/documents/TBEP 06 08 Model Regional Fert
ilizer_Ordinance.pdf
Manatee County Ordinance
https://library.municode.com/fl/manatee_ county/codes/code_of ordinances?nodeld=PTIIMACO
COOR CI12-14ENRE ARTIVLAMAFERE
Tampa Bay Estuary Program,Tampa Bay Nitrogen Management Consortium calculations, pgs
126-146.
https://records.manateeclerk.com > 2018/03 > BC20180313D00003
OF/IFAS, "Recommendations for N, P, K, and Mg for Golf Course and Athletic Field Fertilization
Based on Mehlich III Extractant" https:Hedis.ifas.ufl.edu/ss404
Florida Friendly BMP for Protection of Water Resources by the Green Industries.
httl2s:Hffl.ifas.ufl.edu/pdf/grn-ind-bml2-en-12-2008.pdf
Best Management Practices for the Enhancement of Environmental Quality on Florida Golf
Courses, September 2012. https:Hfloridadep.gov/sites/default/files/ lg fbmp07.pdf
The Fate of Nitrogen Applied to Florida Turfgrass, https:Hedis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep546
Nitrate Leaching from Soluble Nitrogen Applied to `Floratam' St. Augustine Grass and Common
Centipedegrass During Dormancy,
https://wfrec.ifas.ufl.edu/media/wfrecifasufledu/turf�,,rass/florida-dep-funded-stud, /� fdep-
pdfs/Nitrate Leaching from Soluble N.pdf
Homeowner Best Management Practices for the Home Lawn http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep236
Urban Water Quality and Fertilizer Ordinances: Avoiding Unintended Consequences: A Review
of the Scientific Literature, htt2s://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ss496
IFAS Publication SL -21, General Recommendations for Fertilization of Turfgrasses on Florida
Soils, https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/1h014
Florida Fertilizer Rule, 5E-1.003, https://www.flrules.org/,gateway/ruleNo.asp?id=5E-1.003
USDA Plant Hardiness Zones - Florida http://www.plantfinder.com/floridazones.cfm
Rao Mylavarapu, Ph.D, Professor, Sustainable Nutrient Systems, Director of IFAS Analytical
Services Laboratories, Soil & Water Sciences Department
J. Bryan Unruh, Ph.D., Professor and Associate Center Director, West Florida Research and
Education Center, University of Florida
Laurie Trenholm, Ph.D., Professor and Urban Turfgrass Specialist, Environmental Horticulture
Department, University of Florida
Jennifer Possley, South Florida Conservation Program Manager, Fairchild Tropical Botanic
Garden
Calculate the Percentage of Slow Release Nitrogen, Seminole County
https://www.seminolecountyfl '
gov/core/fileparse.php/3243/urlt/Calculate-the-Percentage-of
S low-Release-Nitrogen.pdf
General Recommendations for Fertilization of Turfgrasses on Florida Soils
https:Hedis.ifas.ufl.edu/Ih014
Fertilizing Your North Florida Lawn,
https://sfyl. ifas.ufl. edu/media/sfylifasufledu/baker/docs/pdf/horticulture/FertilizingYourNFLLaw
n_002.pdf
Selected Fertilizer for Turfgrass Fertilization,
https://ufdcimages.uflib.ufl. edu/IR/00/00/31 /23/00001 /S S 31800.pdf
Florida Friendly Fertilizing
https://www.swfwmd.state.fl.us/sites/default/files/store products/florida-friendly-fertilizing.pdf
Caccia and Boyer (2007)
https://www. sciencedirect. com/science/article/abs/pii/S 0025326X07000744
Briceflo, Boyer, and Harlem (2011),
http://serc.fiu.edu/wqnmetwork/BNP/Final%20Report`/`20BNP.pdf