281-22 120 Years of Sustainable Crop Production.

Poster Number 1602

See more from this Division: Special Sessions
See more from this Session: Long-Term Agricultural Research: A Means to Achieve Resilient Agricultural Production for the 21st Century and Beyond (Poster Session)

Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Minneapolis Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC

Charles C. Mitchell, Auburn University, Auburn University, AL, Dennis Delaney, Crop, Soil & Environmental Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL and Kipling S. Balkcom, USDA-ARS, Auburn, AL
Poster Presentation
  • asa2015 120 Years of Sustainable Production.pdf (4.7 MB)
  • Abstract:
    In the late 1800s, the Southern U.S. was producing most of the world’s cotton on highly erodible soils with little or no lime or fertilizer.  Cotton every year without cover crops was taking a toll from the land and its farmers.  Land Grant Universities and Experiment Stations were just getting started when Professor J.F. Duggar at Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College (now Auburn University) established an experiment to test his theories that agriculture could thrive if only farmers would “. . . keep their fields green in winter.”  Thus began Alabama’s “Old Rotation” experiment (circa 1896) followed by the nearby “Cullars Rotation” experiment (circa 1911) two of the oldest, continuous experiments in the world involving cotton.  They continue because of their contribution to our knowledge of sustainable crop production on the highly weathered soils of the Southeastern U.S.  These experiments remain relevant because they have been modified for conservation tillage, irrigation, moisture monitoring and IPM and support relevant topics such as “sustainable agriculture”, “soil health”, and “nutrient use efficiency”.

    See more from this Division: Special Sessions
    See more from this Session: Long-Term Agricultural Research: A Means to Achieve Resilient Agricultural Production for the 21st Century and Beyond (Poster Session)

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