Cover Crops Make for Better Soil Nutrient Usage


There are many advantages to planting cover crops but one often overlooked area is making better use of nutrients in the soil. The additional fertilizer salvaged from the soil goes into the equivalent of the soil’s bank account, which can be used later when it is needed.

“Cover crops grow and take up nitrogen during the normally fallow season,” Eileen Kladivko of Purdue University says. “This helps shrink the ‘brown gap’ and keep the land green for a longer time.”
Legume cover crops, such as clovers, hairy vetch and cowpeas, biologically fix nitrogen. The question is, how much is fixed, how much is released and when this happens, she said.

Non-legume plants, such as annual cereals, ryegrass, brassicas and mustards, pull nitrogen from the soils. The question again is how much nitrogen is trapped, how much is released and when does this occur.

Kladivko said among the most popular plants utilized in cover crops are cereal rye, annual ryegrass, wheat, oats, barley and triticale. The amount of biomass produced is key to nutrient uptake and these plants produce good stands with rapid growth, she said.

The age and stage of plants when terminated determines the amount of nitrogen contributed in the soil from cover crops. Several factors, such as the carbon to nitrogen ratio, plant composition, decomposition rates and the weather all factor into the amount of nitrogen available to grow crops in the soil.

When high carbon residues, especially those from non-legume cover crops, are added to the soil, soil nitrogen is immobilized (tied-up) for some time before mineralization (the release of nitrogen) happens. With lower carbon residues from legume plants there is no immobilization time and the release of nitrogen can occur in a relatively short period of time, she said.

For farmers who want to try cover crops, Kladivko suggests a five-step, two-year plan for a corn-soybean rotation.

The first step would be to plant cereal rye into corn stalks in the fall. Cereal rye can be planted late and is one of the most winter-hardy of the covers, she said.

Kladivko said step two would be to terminate the crop the following spring. The preferred option is to spray the crop two weeks before planting or when cereal rye is 6 to 12 inches tall, she said. This way the covers are dead and there is less residue to plant through, she said. Alternative methods in wet field conditions would be spraying to kill the covers immediately before or after planting.

Step three would be to no-till soybeans into the cereal rye. Kladivko said one consideration would be to think about planting a shorter season bean variety to provide more time in the fall for the next cover crop.

Step four would be to plant cover crops, such as oats or daikon radish, that winter-kill after a freeze and before planting the next spring. The advantage of going with a crop that winter-kills is there are no termination timing issues the next spring before step five, which is to no-till plant corn into dead covers.

“We recommend more starter fertilizer maybe 30 to 50 lbs. actual nitrogen per acre to be used at planting as there could be some nitrogen tie-up issues from the dead oats,” she said. “You put more on at planting and then maybe less at side dressing time.”


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