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Agricultural & Environmental Letters Abstract - Research Letters

Effect of Multispecies Cover Crop Mixture on Soil Properties and Crop Yield

 

This article in AEL

  1. Vol. 2 No. 1 170030
    unlockOPEN ACCESS
     
    Received: Sept 06, 2017
    Accepted: Nov 22, 2017
    Published: December 7, 2017


    * Corresponding author(s): sjagada1@utk.edu
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doi:10.2134/ael2017.09.0030
  1. Mingwei Chua,
  2. Sindhu Jagadamma *a,
  3. Forbes R. Walkera,
  4. Neal S. Easha,
  5. Michael J. Buschermohlea and
  6. Lori A. Duncana
  1. a Dep. of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996
Core Ideas:
  • After 3 yr, soybean yield was higher from multispecies than from single- and double-species cover cropping.
  • Multispecies cover cropping had higher soil water and inorganic N content than less-diverse treatments.
  • Soil organic C was unaffected by cover crop species diversity.
  • Several years of cover cropping are needed to achieve ecosystem benefits.

Abstract

Multispecies cover cropping has become popular in recent years because of the multiple ecosystem benefits compared with single- or double- species cover cropping. However, scientific studies on the effects of multispecies cover cropping—especially in the southern United States—are limited. A field study was initiated in 2013 at the University of Tennessee’s Research and Education Center in Milan, TN, to assess the agronomic and soil responses from single-, double-, and multispecies cover cropping in corn (Zea mays L.)–soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] systems. After 3 yr, we found that a multispecies mixture of legumes, grasses, and Brassica spp. significantly increased soybean yield, gravimetric soil water content, and soil inorganic nitrogen as compared to the less-diverse treatments and a no-cover control. However, after 3 yr, cover cropping did not increase soil organic carbon. Although multispecies cover cropping exhibited a positive effect on yield and some soil properties after 3 yr, we plan to continue collecting multiple years of data from this field trial.

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Copyright © 2017. Copyright © by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America, Inc.