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2003 Highlights 

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Integrating Sheep, Grain

Cover Crops in Vegetables

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SARE 2003 Highlights

Cover Crops Deter Root-Damaging Nematodes in Vegetable Systems
soil sampling for nematodes in vegetables
Dorchester County, Md., Extension Agent Betsy Gallagher takes soil samples as part of a SARE-funded project seeking to reduce root-damaging nematodes in
potatoes and soybeans.

When Maryland growers added potatoes to their standard cropping rotations, they discovered a curious, unwanted result. Following potatoes with soybeans, a major commodity grown on Maryland's Eastern Shore, they experienced more problems with crop-damaging nematodes than ever before. They approached their Dorchester County, Md., extension agent, who connected them with University of Maryland scientists who began SARE-funded research into nematode control methods. The researchers focused on the troublesome root knot nematode that was affecting local yields.

"The growers didn't want to give up potatoes as a crop because it fit well in their rotation, but they wanted to know what they could do, culturally, to reduce nematode levels," said Kate Everts, a University of Maryland plant pathologist and project leader. "They were having problems they had never had before."

The treatments, co-designed and tested by area farmers and at a research station, focused on planting cover crops and adding organic soil amendments. Everts found that planting two years of a summer cover crop -- sorghum sudangrass -- combined with poultry litter soil amendments was effective in stemming nematode populations. The "winning" rotation: a winter small grain, followed by potatoes or cucumbers, then a summer cover, and back to a small grain. After two years, farmers planted soybeans following the spring potatoes. In that third year, researchers saw a reduction in nematodes, followed by improvements to soybean yields.

When extension specialist and collaborator Bob Kratochvil tested similar treatments, the sorghum sundangrass also worked to cut the nematodes' presence in the soil. "If you interrupt a host species with a non-host species, you diminish the population so they're more manageable," he said.

At least one farmer plans to continue planting summer cover crops to deter the pest. "It's learning in progress, and we're still experimenting with cover crops," said David Andrews, who farms 2,600 acres in Dorchester County. "We've noticed a difference in the nematode populations -- not 100 percent reduction, but we're getting there."

[For more information about this Northeast Region project, go to www.sare. org/projects and search for LNE00-131.]


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