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Winter Legume Cover Crop Benefits to Corn: Rotation vs. Fixed‐Nitrogen Effects
Author(s) -
Torbert H. Allen,
Reeves Donald W.,
Mulvaney Richard L.
Publication year - 1996
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/agronj1996.00021962008800040005x
Subject(s) - agronomy , cover crop , legume , loam , secale , crop rotation , fertilizer , crop , red clover , biology , trifolium repens , cropping system , mathematics , soil water , ecology
The use of winter legume cover crops for erosion control and to provide additional N to the soil is well established. Other potential benefits to legume cover crops besides N additions have been recognized, but have not been quantified. The objective of this study was to separate the fixed‐N effects from the rotation effects in a winter legume cover cropping system. A field study was initiated in 1989 on a Norfolk loamy sand (fine, loamy, siliceous, thermic Typic Kandiudult) in east‐central Alabama. Corn ( Zea mays L.) was grown following (i) ‘Tibbee’ crimson clover ( Trifolium incarnatum L.), (ii) a partially ineffective‐nodulating crimson clover, CH‐1, (iii) rye ( Secale cereale L.), and (iv) winter fallow. The plots were split into four rates of fertilizer N (0, 56, 112, and 168 kg N ha −1 ) in a split‐plot experimental plan. An evaluation of different methods of distinguishing fixed‐N vs. rotation effects of the winter annual legume cover crop to a subsequent corn crop was made. Regression analysis of the effect of N application rates on N 2 fixation by crimson clover (fertilized with 45 kg N ha −1 ) indicated that CH‐1 clover biomass contained approximately 40 and 101 kg N ha −1 and Tibbee clover contained approximately 51 and 119 kg N ha −1 in 1990 and 1991, respectively. In both years of the study, crimson clover substantially increased corn yield compared with winter fallow, with a yield increase at the highest fertilizer N application level of 7 and 22% for 1990 and 1991, respectively. Estimates of yield increases due to rotation ranged from negative to 40%. The data indicated that winter cover crops improve corn yield and that besides soil N availability, there was very little difference between the beneficial effects of clover and the rye cover crops to corn.

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