Upload
alaina-moore
View
216
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Sod Based Cropping System- The Next Step After Conservation Tillage
Sodbased TeamAuburn Univ., UGA, NWFWMD, VA Tech, The Rodale Institute,
Texas Tech, USDA/ARS, NRCS, FDACS, and several other states who want to join in as funding becomes available
“Virgin prairie can weather drought, fire, and flood – but not plows”
National Geographic, May, 2004
Grasslands
• About 25% of the earth’s surface is composed of grasses
• 29% of U.S. is grasslands• Recognized as a livestock feed and an emerging
bioenergy source• Secondary benefits include: maintain plant and
animal biodiversity and habitat; decreased erosion; improved water quality; increased soil quality; increased soil flora and fauna; carbon sequestration and long term organic matter enhancement; and provides attractive green space and landscapes.
Wetlands along with perennial grasses go hand in hand in environmental
stewardship
• Wetlands are natural buffers for runoff from other land and depend on microbial activity and vegetation to mitigate and tie up N and P as well as heavy metals before water flows into major streams
• The U.S. lost about 50% of its wetlands in the last 200 years
• Florida lost slightly less at about 45% of its wetlands in the same time period
We know that farmers would prefer to grow most crops after perennial
grasses (peanuts, soybeans, watermelons, etc) because the soil
is “clean” and will result in high yields with little use of pesticides and deep root systems which can
take up nutrients from deeper in the soil profile to lower the chance of
nutrients entering into ground water
Sod Based Farming Next Step after Conservation Tillage
• Conventional farming practices now include conservation tillage and cover crops.
• Cadre has helped move peanuts to conservation tillage
• Perennial grasses in rotations with row crops will make more difference in relation to soil health, yield, water quality, risk management, and farm economics than converting from conventional to conservation tillage
• Growers are implementing BMP’s with impetus under TMDL program working with FDACS
Livestock integration into cropping systems September, 2003
Rotation and Conservation Tillage
Cotton
Peanut2nd year bahia
1st year bahia
Profits have been 2-7 times higher with perennialgrasses in a peanut/cotton rotation. Adding livestock also benefited the system by risk aversion and year round utilization of farm resources.(November-April best weather conditions exist, good for winter grazing)
After Peanut After cotton
What’s so Great About the
Sod Based Rotation for growers?!Dec. 2004
Data Collected from Rotation Studies (Greenwood, Quincy, Headland, Tifton)
• Water infiltration• Soil moisture • Nitrates moving through the soil profile• Soil bulk density and compaction• Organic matter content• Earthworm populations• Crops yields and quality• Plant growth measurements (root, LAI, etc.)• Disease • Economics of system• Cattle impact on soil and following crops, etc.
Plant Development LAI Conv. Cotton Bahia Rotation
--------------------LAI-----------------------
1.69 2.07
LSD 0.17
Conv. Cotton Bahia RotationDiameter ------------------mm-----------------------
16.33 22.54LSD 1.33 Area -----------------cm-2-------------------------
57.41 84.86LSD 9.27 Length mm
461.37 641.78LSD 87.61
Peanuts grown in soilwith Bahia roots
Peanuts grown in soilwithout Bahia roots
Same cultivated soil used in both cases with roots added
Conservation Tillage/ Bahiagrass Rotations for Peanut/Cotton
• It works!• Reduces nematodes and diseases• Reduced nitrates in the soil and that leached
below root zone• Increases yields and grades• Enhances soil quality (O.M., earthworms, etc.)• Reduces risks by having alternate enterprises• Reduces planting and harvest time with ½
acreage in row crops• More profitable 2-7 times more
Key to Sod Based System
• Convince growers that it is an idea whose time has come
• Partner with others with similar goals• Be committed to making it work• Growers will buy into it if they see that it will work • Researchers must commit to long term projects
that show that the system on farm with a variety of crops (row crops and vegetables)
Benefits of perennial grasses and livestock in cotton/peanut rotations:
• Increased crop yields and biomass • Reduced pests (nematodes, diseases, and weeds)• Enhanced soil and water quality (reduced nitrates leached
below the root zone due to higher uptake-more recycling)• Provides a feed source for livestock as well as a wildlife refuge• Creates diversity and livestock can be used as an alternate
source of crop utilization• Reduces cash risks associated with row crops, risk
management• Reduces reliance on irrigation, pesticides, and larger
equipment, and less ideal planting and harvest time is required (farming half the acreage of row crops)
• Results in more earthworms and channels for water infiltration• Utilization of farm resources year round• Farm profitability increased 2-7 fold
http://nfrec.ifas.ufl.edu/sodrotation.htm
Sod based rotations have favorably influenced each of thefactors measured over the best conservation tillage and cover cropmanagement systems (Economics, water infiltration, earthworm numbers,soil moisture content, organic matter content, lower penetrometer andresidual nitrogen content, enhanced plant growth, and reduced risks to the farm system.
2007 Southern Conservation Tillage Conference: “The Next Step After Conservation Tillage”June 25-27, 2007, Quincy, FL Highlighting the sod based system