106838 Enhancing Water and Nitrogen Use Efficiency in Soybean-Corn Rotations with Winter Cover Crops.
Poster Number 1344
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Nutrient Management and Environmental Quality General Poster (includes student competition)
Abstract:
2017 ASA, CSSS, SSSA Annual Meeting
October 22-25, 2017 Tampa, FL
Managing Global Resources for a Secure Future
Alexander Hummel Jr., Jeffrey A. Coulter, and Axel Garcia y Garcia
Enhancing Water and Nitrogen Use Efficiency in Soybean-Corn Rotations with Winter Cover Crops
Soybean [Glycine
max (L.) Merr.] and corn (Zea mays
L.) are the dominant crops in the midwestern United
States; however, concern over water and N use and losses during their
production urge the development of cropping systems for enhanced sustainability.
This research aims to achieve greater efficiency of water and N use. A 2-yr
soybean-corn rotation experiment through integration of winter annual cover
crops [camelina (Camelina sativa L.
Crantz), field pennycress (Thlaspi
arvense L.), and winter rye (Secale
cereal L.)] was conducted in southwest Minnesota. Soybean-fallow-corn,
soybean-winter rye-corn, soybean-field pennycress-corn, and soybean-camelina-corn
rotations were evaluated. Cover crops were interseeded into soybean at the full
seed stage and into corn at the dent stage in 2015 and at full physiological
maturity for both soybean and corn in 2016. Total water and N use of crops and
cover crops as well as nitrate N concentration in the leachate were evaluated.
Water
use of soybean and corn showed a gradual increase early in the growing season, mid-season
high values followed by decreasing values associated with the onset of
senescence. Winter annual cover crops
used less water in fall than in spring; following a water
use pattern of winter rye > winter camelina > field pennycress. There was
a reduction of [NO3-N] with the use of cover crops following soybean
and corn compared to fallow, particularly in the spring. Our results showed that
winter cover crops did not affect the grain yield of soybean and corn.
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Nutrient Management and Environmental Quality General Poster (includes student competition)