Cover Crops Can Provide Many Benefits
COLUMBIA, MO.
Having plant growth in fields year-round can
improve the soil, according to Tim Reinbott,
superintendent of the University of
Missouri Bradford Research Center. He says
using cover crops in the fall and spring can provide
large benefits.
“We have our grain crops in the summertime,
but crops in the fall and spring are extremely
important in helping soil health,” Reinbott said.
Cover crops promote microbial activity and
loosen the soil. Several studies conducted at
Bradford show that cover crops will help rainfall
more easily soak into the soil, he said.
“Using a cover crop, you’ll get a lot more water
infiltration, maybe up to 50 percent more than
without a cover crop,” Reinbott said. He said
cover crops are particularly helpful with water
infiltration on no-till fields.
Cover crops can also put nutrients down in
fields. Reinbott says that winter annual legumes
like hairy vetch, Austrian winter peas or crimson
clover biologically fix nitrogen, which then
can be released to a succeeding crop. He says
that the seed cost of cover crops is considerably
less than other nitrogen sources.
“Our studies show maybe 50 to 75 pounds of
nitrogen a year,” Reinbott said. “Another part of
this is that our cereal ryes or tillage radishes
can capture a lot of the nitrogen that is left over
at the end of the year. So instead of nitrogen
being washed off or lost through leeching or
denitrification, cover crops can actually help
capture that nitrogen, and when they are destroyed,
it’s released back to the next crop.”
Reinbott says researchers at Bradford are
looking at several different methods of destroying
the cover crops, including applying herbicides,
using a roller crimper, and mowing them
down.
The best results have been when they plant directly
into the standing cover crop and then
desiccate it, he said. “It’s easier to get good seedto-
soil contact that way. When we mow it down
or roll it down, we’re dealing with 6 to 7 inches
of mulch that we have to try to plant through,
and that becomes a problem. One of the things
we’re going to have to look at is how to manage
that thick cover that we want, yet at the same
time get a good stand.”
Cover crops can also provide weed control, reduce
water runoff and pull up phosphorus and
potassium from below the claypan.
There are a wide variety of cover crops that
have different advantages. Hairy vetch has a
wide window of planting, is winter-hardy and
produces a lot of biomass. Crimson clover
blooms early enough in the spring that you can
plant corn and, if allowed to bloom, it will reseed
itself. Tillage radishes and cereal rye have
tremendous roots that can loosen the soil. Less
compaction equals greater root density deeper
in the ground following rye and radishes.
“Cover crops are very exciting and I encourage
farmers to try some,” Reinbott said. “Don’t plant
your whole farm because each farm is a little
different. Try to figure out how to make it work
on your property. I guarantee there is a system
that will work with your soil type and slopes.” Δ