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1996 Highlights 

Diversifying Rotations Improves Corn Profits

In-Field Classrooms Aid Extension

Soil Amendments, Biocontrols Help Potatoes Thrive

Fatter Profits From Leaner Beef

Bringing Chefs to the Farm Raises Profits

CRP Choices Favor Grazing and Wildlife

Soil Microbes Curb Damaging Weeds

Resource Managers Tap Info Frontier

Software Offers Site-Specific Options

A Smoother Path for Milk Producers

 
All Highlights


SARE 1996 Highlights

Diversifying Rotations Improves Corn Profits
in-field evaluation of corn plants
 

New York cash-grain farmers who rotate crops are boosting corn profits by $30 to $115 per acre while protecting the environment, SARE on-farm research shows. Rotations enhance corn yields and make it easier to reduce inputs. Eliminating the need for corn rootworm insecticide alone saves $15 to $20 per acre. By growing corn after soybeans, farmers increased yields by 8 to 27 bushels per acre compared with nonrotated corn last year on the four farms in this study. The farms range in size from 200 to 1,600 acres of silty loam or clay loam soil. The farmers did even better when they used a three-year rotation of soybeans, winter wheat/frost-seeded clover and then corn. That boosted corn yields by 20 to 25 bushels per acre. With one or more nitrogen-providing crops in the rotation, the farmers reduced their need for commercial nitrogen by an average of 30 percent. They pared herbicide costs for corn by 60 percent by spraying weedkillers only in narrow bands in the crop rows and by cultivating weeds just once. Favorable market prices for wheat and soybeans also strengthened farmers' profits. Studies such as this are helping cash croppers realize that smart rotations can outperform continuous corn, even with government incentives for growing corn. (Northeast Region project ANE92.8)

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