Quincy2015pptx
Transcript of Quincy2015pptx
What needs to be adjusted to find the best fit?
Where are the best places for cover crops on your farm?
When is the best time for establishment and termination?
? ?
Increase management
Host pests
Become a weed
Prevent soil drying
Dry out soil excessively
Interfere w/ equipment
performanceSuppress crop
growth
Tie up N
Add cost
Cover Crops
Adapted from Magdoff and Weil (2004)
Not all CC effects are positive
Cover crops require and reward management more than broadly adapted technologies
Wow...cover crops are not idiot-proof!
Carlson, S. 2013. Winter rye cover crop effect on grain crop yields: Year 4. Practical Farmers of Iowa. Ames, Iowa.
Miguez, F.E. and G.A. Bollero. 2005. Review of corn yield response under winter cover cropping systems using meta-analytic methods. Crop Science. 45:2318-2329.
Field operation IA* IL IN* MO*
Fertilizer buggy 4.15 (1.50-7.50)
4.72 (3.07-6.37) 4.97 (3-15) fert6.02 (3.50-15)
fert+seedHarrowing 8.10 (4-
12.50)6.78 (3-12)
Cultipacking 6.55 (3-10) 8.50 (5-15)
Broadcast w/ ATV 10.35 (8-12) 7.44 (3-12.50)
Conv. grain drill 13 (7.50-20) 11.40 15.89 (13.63-18.15) s
13 (8-24) sg14.09 (10-24) gc
No-Till grain drill 15.35 (12-25) 14.60 14.47 (10.80-18.14)
14.80 (10-24) s14.25 (5-25) sg
Air seeder 16.40
Per acre costs of cover crop planting operations based on custom rate surveys
Costs Program 1 Program 2 Program 3 Program 4Seed 11.25 7.50 11.25 9.00
Seeding operation 4.15 15.00 10.00 10.00Seed incorporation 6.50
Herbicide 2.00 2.00Termination
operation6.50 6.50
Total 30.40 31.00 21.25 19.00
Examples of total cover crop management programs ($/ac)
Program 1
Seed: 90 lbs/ac cereal rye
Seeding operation: spread w/fertilizer buggy
Seed incorporation: rolling stalk chopper
Herbicide: 24 oz. glyphosate
Termination operation: 90’ boom spray rig
Program 3
Seed: 90 lbs of cereal rye
Seed bed preparation: none
Seeding operation: aerial seeding
Herbicide: no added cost, burn-down standard
Termination operation: no added cost, burn-down standard
Program 2
Seed: 60 lbs/ac cereal rye
Seed bed preparation: none
Seeding operation: no-till drill
Herbicide: 24 oz. glyphosate
Termination operation: 90’ boom spray rig
Program 4
Seed: 3 bushels of bin-run oats
Seed bed preparation: none
Seeding operation: aerial seeding
Herbicide: none – winter-kill
Termination operation: none – winter-kill
Strong demand has increased the price
of CC seed
IA and IL Aerial Applicator Survey (May-June 2010)
Name Location Experience w/CC Cost
Cady Aerial Spray Rock Falls, IL
no exp., no customer
interest $8.00/a norm app $8.50/a cc
Benoit Aerial
Spraying Kankakee, IL turnips and rye $8.00/a norm app $10.00/a cc
Franks Flying
Service Morrison, IL ryegrass and c. rye $8.00/a norm app $10.00/a cc
Reeds Fly-on
Farming Mattoon, IL
yes, c. rye, small part
of business $8.00/a norm app $12.00/a cc
Killiam Flying
Service Carlinville, IL
rye, wheat on beans,
rye on corn$8.00/a norm app $10.00/ac
or 10/lb
Curless Flying
Service Astoria, IL ryegrass and turnips $8-15.00/a all app.
Klein Flying
Service
St. Francisville,
IL annual rye and turnips~$12.50/a cc, $9.00/a liquid
app
Agriflite Services Wakarusa, IN rye, wheat, ryegrass ave $15.00/a for cc app.
Al's Aerial
Spraying Ovid, MI rye and wheat$10-15.00/a cc $10.00/a
liquid
Opportunities for planting cover crops
• Dormant seeding early or late winter• Frost seeding• In the spring
• When planting summer crops• Prevent plant scenarios• Before canopy closure
• After small grains• After vegetables
• After seed corn or silage corn• Aerial or high clearance seeding into standing crops in late
summer/early fall as canopy opens• After early corn/bean grain harvest
• After full season corn/bean grain harvest
“I run a delayed burn down..... Usually mid to late May. I have switched back to older chems..... I miss the Callisto, we’re supposed to only get a few weeks residual, but 2yrs ago I seeded some clover every week tilAugust..... In August, still fried clover after emergence. With that said, I did have a bunch of clover pop the next spring, just doubt I got much benefit from it..... Since it showed up about the week I sprayed.” L. Steinlage, West Union, IA
In 2014, we interseeded different mixes of cover crops into both corn and soybeans with a Hagie high-clearance sprayer equipped with a Gandy dry box with boom hosing on August 26.
Species Shade ratingCrownvetch 83
Kura clover 56
Strawberry clover 47
Crimson clover 39
Arrowleaf clover 39
Berseem clover 38
White clover 38
Sub. clover 31
Red clover 30
Birdsfoot trefoil 25
Alsike clover 22
Alfalfa 20
Species Shade ratingRiver oats 83
Cluster fescue 76
Reed canary grass 69
Orchard grass 66
Smooth brome grass 66
Kentucky bluegrass 60
Tall fescue 49
Annual ryegrass 47
Perennial ryegrass 44
Redtop 41
Timothy 36
Cool season legumes Cool season grasses
Some of these species may be the future of early interseeding!
Soybean herbicides like fomesafen, chlorimuron (in products such as Classic) and imazethapyr (Pursuit) create significant risk for legumes and brassicas but are generally not an issue for small grains.
Corn herbicides like atrazine and simazine should be used at less than 1 pound per acre when cereal grains are used for covers, and less than 0.75 pounds per acre for most legume cover crops, mustards and annual ryegrass.
1) Persistence of herbicide activity in soil
2) Cover crop sensitivity to herbicide
Herbicides with short half-lives (time it takes for 50% of the active ingredient to dissipate) are less of a concern.
Factors influencing the rate of dissipation include rainfall, soil texture and soil pH, etc.
In general, products with a 4 month or less rotation restriction for the species of interest, close relative, or sensitive species should pose little problem.
2 main factors impact potential for herbicide injury to cover crops
Corvus Atrazine
Flexstar
Lexar Halex
WIU student project in 2012
Perform a bioassay if you have concerns
Do you scout your fields in the rain?
If not, you are missing a great opportunity to see soil health in action!
Low risk cover crop system for a CORN-SOY rotation:
1. No-till drill cereal rye into corn stalks. You can drill (or broadcast/harrow) in Nov. and still establish a good stand.
2. No-till soybeans into terminated cereal rye. Plant an earlier group soybean and harvest in September.
3. No-till drill a low C:N cover crop mix (e.g., oats and radish) that will reliably winter kill.
4. No-till or strip-till corn into the CC residues.
Q. Which cover crops collect/remove nitrogen (N) the quickest or most efficiently? Q: How do I determine which cover crops are best suited for my soils and typography? Q. What is the carbon-nitrogen penalty, meaning how many units of carbon to how many units of nitrogen? How do I account for that? Q. I am just starting to grow cover crops. Which ones are easier to start with? Which ones should I stay away from? Q. Can I plant cover crops on fields in continuous corn? Q: Which cover crops are better for weed control? Q. We’ve had trouble getting a good stand of cover crops the last two years. Last year, we planted cereal rye and radishes on the corn ground going into soybeans. We planted cereal rye, radish and crimson clover with a plane on ground going into corn. Our fields are in northeast St. Clair County. Q. A Monmouth farmer asks, “Is there a better product and/or faster working product than what I’m doing if the rye has any size to it? Burndown of annual rye is frustrating and slow. I was told to always use Roundup 32-44 oz., 1 pt. 24-D, A.M.S. on the first trip. Then the second trip put down my residual. Sometimes with the wet and busy spring, it is tough to fit in. I want to keep a cover crop on in the winter.” Q: When cover crops decompose, what amounts of nitrogen do they contribute back into the soil? Q: What should I consider about reliability of cover crop seed sources? What about seed mixes?
Cover crop FAQ on FARMWEEKNOW.COM