January 27, 2004
By
Don Comis,
USDA/ARS
No-till crops like wheat and
peas can be grown without undue erosion on land that has been
rested in grass under the federal Conservation Reserve Program (CRP),
according to a 6-year study by
Agricultural Research Service scientists.
CRP lands are often judged to
be highly erodible. No-till planting minimizes erosion because
crop seeds are planted directly through the plant residue left
from the previous crop, without plowing the field.
Soil scientists Donald L.
Tanaka, Stephen D. Merrill and colleagues at the ARS
Northern Great Plains
Research Laboratory in Mandan, N. Dak., began their study in
1994 on plots laid out on former wheatfields that had been
seeded to a grass-alfalfa mixture under the CRP program in 1989.
In 2000, Merrill, Chi-hua
Huang, a soil scientist with the ARS
National Soil Erosion Research Lab in West Lafayette, Ind.,
and others twice repeated a 3-year rotation of spring wheat,
winter wheat and dry pea for a total of six growing seasons.
First, they grew the crops
under both no-till and moderate conventional disk tilling. Then
they used rainfall simulation equipment to compare the soil
erosion that occurred with each of those tillage methods, with
erosion caused on plots left in grass and harvested for hay once
a year.
The researchers found that
growing the crops with no-till caused no more erosion than
occurred when grass was harvested annually for hay. They also
showed that both the land cropped with a wheat-pea rotation
under no-till and CRP grassland annually harvested for hay had
one-sixth as much erosion as did land cropped with moderate
conventional tillage.
ARS is
USDA's chief scientific
research agency. |