Impacts of summer-seeded legume cover crops and termination-tillage method on nitrogen availability to corn in rotation
Impacts of summer-seeded legume cover crops and termination-tillage method on nitrogen availability to corn in rotation
Blog Article
Summer-seeding legume cover crops can reduce erosion, mitigate nitrate leaching losses during the non-growing season, and provide bio-accumulated nitrogen (N) to the following crop.Very little information is available, however, on the most effective methods for terminating summer-seeded cover crops, or on the amount of N they can provide to subsequent crops.We therefore evaluated the impacts of selected legume cover crops and cover crop termination-tillage methods on corn (Zea mays L.) N credit and grain yield in a soybean (Glycine max Merr.
) - winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)/cover crop - corn rotation over 3 consecutive years on a clay loam soil in southwestern Ontario.The cover crops were summer-seeded after wheat harvest, and included hairy vetch (Vicia villosa L.Roth), red clover (Trifolium pratense L.
), white clover plus crimson clover mix (incarnatum and Trifolium alba L.), and a ds durga hand soap no cover crop control (CK).The cover crops were nested within termination-tillage method, including moldboard plow-down in fall, and herbicide spray-down in spring under strip-tillage or no-tillage then corn planting.Nitrogen fertilizer to corn was applied via side-dress at 200 kg N ha-1 to the CKs, and at 100 kg N ha-1 to the cover crops.
Averaged over 3 years, above-ground biomass N level followed the pattern: hairy vetch > white clover plus crimson clover mix > red clover for fall plow-down termination.There were no significant differences in cover crop biomass N levels for spring termination.Corn response to cover crop was significantly affected by termination-tillage method and cover crop species, with poor corn stands after no-tillage, red clover and white plus crimson clover.Fall plow-down termination provided a range in N credit of 80-85 kg kaiser copy stands N ha-1, which was significantly greater than the N credit under herbicide spray-down in spring.
Under spring strip-tillage and no-tillage, hairy vetch produced significantly greater corn grain yields than red clover and white plus crimson clover mix.