Soil Management-Conservation Tillage
|
|
|
Colorado crop farmer Randy
Hines, shown with wife, Cheryl, designed a tillage tool that
creates irrigation furrows every other row while retaining corn
stalk residue, reducing water application.
Photo by Ron Daines |
|
Conservation tillage leaves at least 30 percent of the soil surface
covered by residue after planting. No-till planters leave much more
than that by placing seeds or transplants in narrow slots, the only
area where farmers disturb the soil. No-till consistently improves
water infiltration, with reports of up to three times the infiltration
of moldboard-plowed soil. Infiltration is likely to continue to increase the longer the soil is under no-till.
In Indiana, SARE-funded researchers at Purdue University tested
cover crop mixes in corn and soybean operations. They found that
cereal cover crops like wheat and rye increased soil aggregation
and thus, water infiltration thanks to a more stable soil structure.
Changing to no-till methods rather than plowing also had a great
impact.
“Leaving the residue at the soil surface improves the soil,”
said project leader Eileen Kladivko, because it minimizes raindrop
impact and compaction, and increases earthworms that develop soil
pores. “Either no-till or cover crops can be a benefit.”
Farmers in eastern Washington are adopting a no-till system co-developed
by Diana Roberts of Washington State University (WSU) and grain
farmer Karl Kupers. With a SARE grant, Roberts and Kupers devised
a direct-seeding program where they drill alternative crops like
hard red wheat directly into crops grown for seed, such as condiment
mustard. The expanded rotation and no-till planting was a revolutionary
shift from Kupers’ former wheat/fallow system.
Researchers building on Roberts’ study examined water use
efficiency in the direct-seeding system and found that soil water
storage and efficiency increased. “There was a trend for larger
pore sizes under natural vegetation that would allow the soil to
hold more water and provide increased soil aeration,” said
lead researcher David Bezdicek of WSU.
In western Colorado, many farmers irrigate in furrows between
crop rows plowed clean to facilitate water flow. Aided by a SARE
farmer/rancher grant, Randy Hines, a crop farmer in Delta, Colo., wanted a better furrow irrigation
strategy. Hines built a tillage tool that leaves vegetative residue
on the soil, ripping the earth simultaneously to create irrigation
furrows in every other 30-inch row.
Hines saved water by using half the typical number of irrigation
furrows. He also protected the soil surface by retaining erosion-reducing
corn stalk residue and reduced his tractor trips by half before
planting corn, saving between $35 and $50 an acre. Corn yields remained
similar to the previous year’s crop grown under conventional
tillage.
Hines planted yellow beans in the field containing corn stalks
using the same minimum tillage practices, comparing conventional
plowing on an adjacent field. Hines noticed fewer weeds, used less
water, and experienced no yield reduction in his bean harvest. In
fact, in just two years, Hines boosted his soil’s organic
matter.
Hines’ efforts have sparked interest among other area farmers,
who have planted winter wheat in minimum-till corn, onions in hay,
and other combinations. “Before our project, there was little minimum tillage done
in our valley,” Hines said. After other farmers saw his results,
every year “there are more acres not being plowed.”
Another no-till advocate, Steve Groff of Lancaster County, Pa.,
credits undisturbed soil combined with well-timed, year-round cover
cropping, with improving soil quality and water infiltration. Groff,
who grows a mix of market vegetables and grain crops, designed a
no-till vegetable transplanter that allows him to plant seedlings
directly into the thick residue of winter-grown cover crops. His
annual vegetative residue has built organic matter and makes a noticeable
difference when there’s too much or not enough rainfall.
“My crops seem to show drought stress a few days later then
those around me,” Groff says. During the typical hot, droughty
months of summer, his plants have an added vigor. “That’s
when a good no-till system really shines,” he says.
With his video camera, Groff has documented his farm’s ability
to absorb heavy rainfall in dramatic contrast to the steady streams
of water pouring off his neighbors’ farms. Lancaster County
runoff winds up in the Chesapeake Bay.
Compost |
Cover Crops | N.Y.
Farmer Profile
Top
|