Cropping System Strategies To Mitigate Drought
COLUMBIA, MO.
Producers can take steps to reduce the impact
of drought, should we face another
shortage of rainfall in 2013, says a University
of Missouri plant scientist.
Strategies to mitigate drought include diversifying
crops and varieties, said Rob Myers, adjunct
associate professor at the MU College of
Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources.
“Something to look at is adding other cool-season
crops to the rotation, like winter wheat or
canola, to help our overall cropping system better
withstand drought as we move forward,”
Myers said. “Among the summer annual crops,
sunflowers and milo are drought-tolerant options.
Sunflowers can be planted early like corn
or double-cropped after wheat.”
Some new corn and soybean hybrids are advertised
as drought resistant, but Myers says
that drought-resistant varieties may not be the
best choice.
“I think in some cases those are worth looking
at,” Myers said. “In other cases, maybe they’ve
been developed for other regions of the country,
so farmers need to understand when looking at
those varieties how and where they were developed.”
Myers suggests looking for varieties that are
high-yielding over multiple environments for
multiple years. Yield stability is needed to get
through a drought year. Myers says farmers
should also look at different maturities.
“A lot of our droughts tend to build up as the
summer goes on,” he said. “Varieties of corn and
soybeans that mature a little early, combined
with early planting dates, can get the critical
flowering and seed-set period into a time when
the soil might not be quite as dry as it might be
later in the summer.”
While early planting dates are generally better,
Myers says a mix of planting dates and maturities
can be beneficial.
“We may have a year like last year, where the
hurricane came through and provided some
rain at the end of August,” Myers said. “What
we saw was the beans that were later maturities
did a little better because they were still filling
seed when we got that late rain. So there is
an advantage to diversifying varieties and planting
dates to reduce risk.”
Cover crops can also be helpful in mitigating
drought conditions. Not only do they provide a
cover in the fall through the spring, they also
provide some residue that better blankets the
soil going into the cropping season, he said.
Crops will fare better during drought if they
don’t have to deal with other sources of plant
stress at the same time.
“Just like us as human beings, if we’re
stressed and tired we are more likely to pick up
a cold or get sick,” Myers said. “We’ll have fewer
problems down the road by having varieties
with good insect and disease resistance, so that
they’re not being stressed by those pests while
they are also suffering from moisture conditions.”
Other strategies to help mitigate drought include
building soil organic matter and overall
soil health, and preserving soil cover to maintain
moisture. Δ