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Why Did Cover Crops Cause Issues in Minnesota the Last Two Years and What Should Growers Do Going Forward?

Why Did Cover Crops Cause Issues in Minnesota the Last Two Years and What Should Growers Do Going Forward?


Cover crops are a key practice to improve soil health by building soil structure and adding organic matter outside the summer growing season. But there’s a real risk to cash crop productivity that must be managed when using cover crops. In the recent dry years in Minnesota, cover crops have caused a lot of crop stress and yield loss in cash crops. Why has this happened? How can we avoid this in the future?

What were the cover crop issues in 2022 and 2023?

The biggest reason cover crops caused yield drag the last couple years is a lack of soil moisture. Fall 2021 and 2022 were both very dry, so cover crops may have emerged spottily, or may not have emerged at all. Spring 2022 and 2023 were both wetter, so in some cases cover crops couldn’t be terminated on time. In other cases, growers waited in hopes of wicking up some of the (at that time) excess moisture, and that decision didn’t pan out well as summer rains were sparse in most parts of the state.

For example, at U of M cover crop research trials in west-central Minnesota, 2022 soybean planting was severely delayed by a month or longer due to wet conditions. Our treatments of cereal rye termination timing before, at, or after planting were accordingly delayed too, so the rye biomass grew much larger than we anticipated . When rye was terminated June 16-17, after soybean planting June 7-8, we saw rye biomass of over 4,000 lbs/ac at two on-farm sites (Fig 1), and over 7,000 lbs/ac at the West Central Research and Outreach Center in Morris. In most locations across western MN, this post-planting termination caused a soybean yield drag in 2022. One exception was a farm near Appleton, where, due to substantial residue left from the 2021 corn crop, rye only grew to 384 lbs/ac, which had no effect on soybean yield.

If we had gotten rain throughout the 2022 growing season, we might not have seen a yield hit even at 4,000 lbs/ac. We ran the same trial at the Northwest Research and Outreach Center in Crookston, and up to 2300 lbs/ac of biomass caused no soybean yield drag. That area received much more normal precipitation in May, got planted earlier, and after a dry June had normal July rainfall, so water stress was less of an issue. We rarely see cover crop biomass numbers that high in MN, but if you’re looking for weed suppression from cover crops, you might need around 3,500 lbs/ac to get 50% weed suppression.

The precipitation story in 2023 was similar to 2022 in many parts of the state: a wet spring made it hard to terminate the cover crop early, and then there was very little rain in the early growing season to replenish what the cover crop had taken up. In our termination timing research plots, the 2023 soybean stand counts suggest we may have another year of late rye termination causing yield drag, but it ain’t over til it’s over.

There were other issues from cover crops in 2022 as well. Overwintering cover crops provide an attractive egg laying site for migratory insects like black cutworm and true armyworm. When planting an overwintering cover crop it is important to remain diligent with insect monitoring so you can make insect management decisions in a timely manner in order to protect your cash crop. Cover crops can also act as a green bridge for other plant disease and insect issues. Terminating cover crops at or after planting of cash crop creates the greatest risk for these pest issues.

In the long-term, better soil structure from cover crops and reduced tillage can help hold water in the soil. We saw this at on-farm research sites in south-central MN in 2021, where “soil health” sites with a history of reduced or no tillage and some cover crop use had significantly more water deeper in the soil profile than “conventional” plots with more tillage. This is one of the big goals of incorporating cover crops into the cropping system, and the key is to manage them so as not to let agronomic issues in the short-term spoil the potential for long-term benefits.






Source: umn.edu

Photo Credit: minnesota-corn-growers-association

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