Farms.com Home   News

Research Identifies Farming And Ecological Benefits Of Cover Crops

According to recent research from a team of agronomists, entomologists, agroecologists, horticulturists and biogeochemists from Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences, planting cover crops in rotation between cash crops can offer even more ecological value than previously thought.

The research, which was published in the March issue of Agricultural Systems, measured the benefits of planted cover crops across more than 10 ecosystem services. The largest benefits gleaned from the results included higher levels of carbon and nitrogen in soils, erosion prevention, development of beneficial soil fungus, and weed suppression.

Meagan Schipanski, lead researcher and postdoctoral scholar at Penn State, said, “Nutrient-retention benefits occur primarily during cover crop growth, weed-suppression benefits occur during cash-crop growth through a cover crop legacy effect, and soil-carbon benefits accrue slowly over decades. By integrating a suite of ecosystem services into a unified analytical framework, we highlighted the potential for cover crops to influence a wide array of ecosystem services. We estimated that cover crops increased eight of 11 ecosystem services. In addition, we demonstrated the importance of considering temporal dynamics when assessing management system effects on ecosystem services."

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

New gates

Video: New gates

We talked about looking into buying or possibly making these gates....