• Authors:
    • Rich, J.
    • Wiatrak, P.
    • Katsvairo, T.
    • Marois, J.
    • Wright, D.
  • Source: Proceedings of the 26th Southern Conservation Tillage Conference for Sustainable Agriculture, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA, 8-9 June, 2004
  • Year: 2004
  • Summary: Soils in the southeast have low organic matter content, low native fertility, and low water holding capacity which has resulted in stagnant yields. Long term studies across the country (Morrow, Sanborn, Magruder, Old Rotation [Auburn]) have shown that land coming out of long term perennial grasses often has an organic matter content of over 4% and decreases as it stays in continuous annual cropping and levels off after 80-100 years once the level reaches about 1 1/2% with use of conservation tillage, cover crops, proper rotation, and modern fertility practices. Years of research in the southeast have shown that perennial grasses such as bahiagrass can help improve soil structure and reduce pests such as nematodes and increase crop yields, sometimes dramatically. Research in the southeast with this perennial grasses grown in rotation with crops has shown higher yields (50% more groundnuts than under conventional annual cropping systems), increased infiltration rates (more than 5 times faster), higher earthworm numbers (thousands per acre vs. none in many cases), and a more economically viable (potential for 3-5 times more profit) cropping system. Diversification into livestock can add another dimension to the farming system making it more intensive and provide a readily available use for perennial grasses.
  • Authors:
    • Sharma, R. D.
    • Corrêa, J. C.
  • Source: Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira
  • Volume: 39
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2004
  • Summary: An experiment was carried out on a heavy red yellow latosol to evaluate crop rotation on herbaceous cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum) yields in no-till system under rainfed Savannah conditions. The treatments were: soyabean-millet ( Pennisetum glaucum)-soyabean-millet-cotton; soyabean-amaranth ( Amaranthus hypochondriacus)-soyabean-forage radish-soyabean-cotton; soyabean-grain sorghum ( Sorghum vulgare [ S. bicolor])-soyabean-grain sorghum-cotton; soyabean-black rye ( Avena strigosa [ A. nuda])-soyabean-black rye-cotton and soyabean-soyabean-cotton. The highest cotton seed yield and best weed control were recorded in the sequence soyabean-millet-soyabean-millet-cotton.
  • Authors:
    • Sanders, D. C.
    • Paullier, J.
    • Maeso, D.
    • Arboleda, J.
    • Gilsanz, J. C.
    • Hoyt, G. D.
    • Behayout, E.
    • Lavandera, C.
  • Source: Proc. XXVI IHC – Sustainability of Horticultural Systems Eds. L. Bertschinger and J.D. Anderson Acta Horticulturae 638, ISHS 2004
  • Issue: 638
  • Year: 2004
  • Summary: Seven rotational systems were evaluated for vegetable crops in USA and Uruguay. Rotational systems that include both winter and summer cover crops and vegetable crops were used. Treatments comprised: continuous cropping system, T1; multiple vegetable system, T2; green manure system, T3; chicken manure system, T4; fallow system, T5; strip tillage system, T6; and no-tillage system, T7. The crops used were sweet potato, squash, oat or triticale winter cover crop, sorghum or Sudan grass summer cover crop, sweetcorn, garlic, carrot with chicken manure and fallow. Different insects, diseases and weed infestations were recorded in the systems. The study began in spring 1999 in Uruguay and spring 2000 in North Carolina, USA. This paper reports only results from Uruguay. The yields obtained were good compared to the national average in most cases. The average yield is 7 t/ha for sweet potato and 3.5 t/ha for garlic. T6 had the highest soil macrofauna (70 worms/m 2 compared to 4.2 in T1). Soil biomass was sampled for four times: 13 April, 26 May, 17 August and 08 November 2000. T7 system had greater soil biomass during the period of observation than T1 or T4 systems. T6 and T7 treatments had the lowest nitrate levels in the soil among all treatments. T4 was enough for garlic growth. T6, T7 and T4 systems had less sclerotia (from Sclerotium rolfsii [ Corticium rolfsii]) than T1 and T2 systems.
  • Authors:
    • Giles, J.
  • Source: Nature
  • Volume: 428
  • Issue: 6985
  • Year: 2004
  • Summary: For the past five years, global sales of organic produce have increased by 20% per year. How much more of the market share will go to organic food depends on how that standard is defined and whether evidence supports claims that "organic" is better for human health and beneficial to the environment and whether organic farming can produce yields sufficient to meet demand.
  • Authors:
    • Gracia, R.
    • Moret, D.
    • Arrúe, J. L.
    • López, M. V.
  • Source: Soil & Tillage Research
  • Volume: 72
  • Issue: 1
  • Year: 2003
  • Summary: Maintenance of crop residues on the soil surface is considered the most effective method to control wind erosion. In semiarid Aragon (NE Spain), where the risk of wind erosion can be high, the adoption of conservation tillage systems has been encouraged as a fallow management alternative. However, little information concerning the dynamics of residue cover during fallow is available for this area. We report here results on the evolution of barley residues during two fallow periods under conventional tillage (CT), reduced tillage (RT) and no-tillage (NT). The three tillage treatments were compared under both continuous cropping (CC) and cereal-fallow (CF) rotation. The CC system involves a summer fallow period of 5-6 months and the CF rotation a long-fallow of 17-18 months. Effects of specific tillage operations on soil cover are also presented and discussed in relation to wind erosion control during the long-fallow period. Average dry mass of barley residues at harvest was 1395 and 729 kg ha(-1) in the first and second year of the study, respectively. In general, crop residues at harvest were not significantly affected by tillage or cropping system. Primary tillage operations had the major influence on residue incorporation with reduction percentages of residue cover of 90-100% in CT (mouldboard ploughing) and 50-70% in RT (chiselling). During the two long-fallow periods, large clods (4-10 cm diameter) produced by mouldboard ploughing did not fully compensate for the complete burial of residues and the soil surface was insufficiently protected against wind erosion (soil covers
  • Authors:
    • Sukhochev, V. N.
    • Gurin, A. G.
  • Source: Sadovodstvo i Vinogradarstvo
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2003
  • Summary: In research during 1997-2000 at the All-Russian Institute of Fruit Crop Breeding in Orel province, Russia, the use of field crops sown between strawberry rows was investigated as a means of suppressing weed growth. Oats, barley, rape and mustard were sown between rows of strawberry cv. Red Gauntlet; the sowing date was manipulated so that the field crops would be cut down after strawberry harvest but before they could set seed. In terms of the number of plants of the major weed species present at the end of vegetative growth, there were 122 plants per linear m in the untreated control, but only 37 in the barley, 48 in the oats, 53 in the mustard and 60 in the rape treatments. The cereals were better at suppressing weeds because they were sown earlier than the crucifers. In terms of annual strawberry fruit yield, the average for the 4 years of the trial was 8.07 t/ha in the control but higher with the weed suppressing crops: 8.18, 8.49, 8.62 and 8.66 for the rape, mustard, oats and barley treatments, respectively.
  • Authors:
    • Sharifabad, H. H.
    • Ghalavand, A.
    • Azizi, K.
    • Sanavy, S. A. M.
  • Source: IRANIAN JOURNAL OF RANGE AND DESERT RESEARCH
  • Volume: 10
  • Issue: 4
  • Year: 2003
  • Summary: A study was conducted during 2000-2001 at the Lorestan Meteorological and Agricultural Research Station, northeast Khorramabad, Iran, to evaluate the effects of mixed and monocropping of annual medics and fallow and chickpea cropping systems on surface runoff, erosion, water conservation and soil water holding capacity. Results showed that mixed cropping of annual medics, which have dense plant cover, performed better than its monocropping system in reducing surface runoff and erosion and in increasing water conservation and soil water holding capacity. The fallow system recorded the highest surface runoff and erosion. At the final stage of the experiment, the Medicago truncatula cv. orion and M. rigidula cv. rigidula mixed cropping system recorded the highest amount of conserved water in soil, which increased infiltration and soil water content, while chickpea cropping system recorded the lowest amount. The soil water retention capacity of mixed cropping system of annual medics was higher than the other treatments.
  • Authors:
    • Aroca, J. A.
    • Guerrero-Campo, J.
    • Bienes, R.
    • Nicolau, J. M.
    • Gomez, B.
    • Espigares, T.
  • Source: Man and soil at the Third Millennium. Proceedings International Congress of the European Society for Soil Conservation, Valencia, Spain, 28 March-1 April, 2000. Volume 2 2002
  • Year: 2002
  • Summary: The desertion of large agricultural lands in Mediterranean areas has important consequences on soil erosion. The aim of this study was to quantify runoff and water soil erosion evolution during the period 1994-97. Runoff and erosion were measured in erosion plots (20* 4 m). Four different treatments were applied, namely bare soil maintained with herbicide, no-tilled barley crop, spontaneous vegetation and leguminous sowing before desertion. These trials were carried out in four areas with different types of soils. The areas are located in the centre of Spain, under a Mediterranean-continental climate. In bare soils, annual runoff coefficient was higher than 10%, increasing through the time because of the soil compaction. These plots showed high soil erosion rates, between 1.3 and 28 t ha/year. Spontaneous vegetation plots produced the lowest erosion rates (from 0.0002 to 0.15 t ha/year). Annual runoff coefficient in no-tilled barley plots increased lightly through the four years, because the minimum ploughing favoured a light soil compaction. Soil erosion rate was low, ~0.3 t ha/year, showing the efficiency of this crop on erosion control. Runoff coefficient in abandoned plots (with spontaneous vegetation) and plots with leguminous sowing before desertion, decreased through the time. The lowest erosion rates were recorded when plant cover was higher than 50%, that is, from 6 months to 2.5 years after crops desertion. It is shown that in these environments soil erosion is not a continuous process, because the main water erosion measured during the four years period were produced only in two or three big storms.
  • Authors:
    • Delaney, D. P.
    • Reeves, D. W.
  • Source: E. van Santen (ed.) 2002. Making Conservation Tillage Conventional: Building a Future on 25 Years of Research. Proc. of 25th Annual Southern Conserva­tion Tillage Conference for Sustainable Agriculture. Auburn, AL, 24-26 June 2002. Special Report no. 1.
  • Year: 2002
  • Summary: Intensive cropping and conservation tillage can increase soil organic C (SOC) and improve soil quality, however, economic reality often dictates cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum) monoculture. We conducted a study on a Compass loamy sand (coarse-loamy, siliceous, subactive, thermic Plinthic Paleudults) from 1998-2001 to compare an intensive conservation cropping system to standard cotton production systems used in the southeastern USA (Alabama). The system uses sunn hemp ( Crotalaria juncea) and ultra-narrow row (UNR; 8-inch drill) cotton in a rotation with wheat ( Triticum aestivum) and maize ( Zea mays). The standard systems used continuous cotton (both standard 40-inch rows and ultra-narrow row) and a maize-cotton rotation with standard row widths. A cover crop mixture of black oat ( Avena strigosa [ A. nuda])/rye ( Secale cereale) was used in all systems preceding cotton and a white lupin ( Lupinus albus)/crimson clover ( Trifolium incarnatum) mix was used before maize in the maize-cotton and intensive system. All systems were tested under conservation and conventional tillage in a split plot design of four replications; main plots were cropping systems and subplots were tillage. We used extension budgets to calculate net returns over variable costs and determined C balance of all residues returned to the soil. At the end of the experiment, soil C was determined by dry combustion (0-0.4, 0.4-2, 2-4, 4-8, and 8-12 in depths). Cropping system had a more consistent effect on cotton yield than tillage system. Four-year average lint yields were 872, 814, 711 and 663 lbs acre -1 for continuous UNR, intensive, maize-cotton, and continuous 40-in cotton systems, respectively. The UNR systems with conservation tillage had the highest net returns ($105 acre -1 year -1 (continuous) and $97 acre -1 year -1 (intensive)) while the conventional tillage continuous 40-in system had the lowest returns ($36 acre -1 year -1). Conservation tillage increased SOC concentration in the top 2 inches of soil 46% compared to conventional tillage. Cropping system affected SOC levels to the 4-in depth and the maize-cotton rotation resulted in the lowest SOC levels of all systems. Results suggest that small grain cover crops and wheat for grain in the intensive system were the dominate factor in SOC changes. For these drought-sensitive soils, UNR cotton production systems with conservation tillage and small grain cover or cash crops have the potential to rapidly increase soil organic matter; improving soil productivity and enhancing economic sustainability of cotton production in the southeastern USA.
  • Authors:
    • Blackshaw, R. E.
    • Anderson, R. L.
    • Derksen, D. A.
    • Maxwell, B.
  • Source: Agronomy Journal
  • Volume: 94
  • Issue: 2
  • Year: 2002
  • Summary: Cropping systems in the northern Great Plains (NGP) have evolved from wheat Triticum aestivum L.)-fallow rotations to diversified cropping sequences. Diversification and continuous cropping have largely been a consequence of soil moisture saved through the adoption of conservation tillage. Consequently, weed communities have changed and, in some cases, become resistant to commonly used herbicides, thus increasing the complexity of managing weeds. The sustainability of diverse reduced tillage systems in the NGP depends on the development of economical and effective weed management systems. Utilizing the principle of varying selection pressure to keep weed communities off balance has reduced weed densities, minimized crop yield losses, and inhibited adverse community changes toward difficult-to-control species. Varied selection pressure was best achieved with a diverse cropping system where crop seeding date, perennation, and species and herbicide mode of action and use pattern were inherently varied. Novel approaches to cropping systems, including balancing rotations between cereal and broadleaf crops, reducing herbicide inputs, organic production, fall-seeded dormant canola (Brassica napus and B. rapa), and the use of cover crops and perennial forages, are discussed in light of potential systems-level benefits for weed management.