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Nitrogen from Legume Cover Crops for No‐Tillage Corn 1
Author(s) -
Ebelhar S. A.,
Frye W. W.,
Blevins R. L.
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
agronomy journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1435-0645
pISSN - 0002-1962
DOI - 10.2134/agronj1984.00021962007600010014x
Subject(s) - vicia villosa , cover crop , agronomy , secale , tillage , loam , legume , green manure , red clover , crop residue , mulch , crop , biology , soil water , agriculture , ecology
Many of the advantages of no‐tillage crop production are due to the presence of a mulch from a cover crop or from crop residue. Legumes can be used to provide the mulch and biologically fixed N to nonlegumes in the system. Field experiments were conducted from 1977 through 1981 to determine the amount of biologically fixed N provided to no‐tillage corn ( Zea mays L.) by winter annual legume cover crops of hairy vetch ( Vicia villosa Roth), big flower vetch ( Vicia grandiflora W. Koch var. Kitailbeliuna ), and crimson clover ( Trifolium incarnuturn L.). The legumes were compared to a cover of corn residue only and a cover crop of rye ( Secale cereule L.). The soil was a Maury silt loam (Typic Paleudalfs, fine‐silty, mixed, mesic). Fertilizer N treatments of 0, 50, and 100 kg ha −1 were combined with each cover treatment. Corn was planted by no‐tillage directly into the cover treatments and the cover crops were killed with herbicides. Hairy vetch produced more dry matter with a higher N percentage which resulted in a higher N concentration in corn plants and substantially more inorganic N (KCI extractable NH + 4 and NO − 3 ) in the soil than with the other legumes. Big flower vetch and crimson clover provided much less N than hairy vetch. Five‐year average yields of corn grain following hairy vetch cover crop with no N fertilizer were about 2.5 Mg ha −1 more than corn yields when following corn residue or rye cover crop. We estimated that hairy vetch supplied biologically fixed N equivalent to approximately 90 to 100 kg ha −1 fertilizer N annually to the corn, based on a comparison of grain yields with corn grown in corn residue and rye. In addition to functioning as an effective mulch, certain legume cover crops can provide a substantial portion of the N for no‐tillage corn production, decreasing the amount of N fertilizer needed.