|
Appendix B
UP-AND-COMING COVER CROPS
Balansa clover
Identified as a promising new cover crop in screening trials throughout
the Southeastern U.S., balansa clover (Trifolium michelianum Savi)
is a small-seeded annual legume with superior reseeding potential
compared with other legumes, including crimson clover. Well-adapted
to a wide range of soil types, balansa performs particularly well
on silty clay soil with a pH of about 6.5. Established stands tolerate
waterlogging, moderate salinity, and soil pH from 4.5 to 8.0. It does
not do well on highly alkaline soils (30).
It is considered marginal in Zone 6B.
Balansa and other reseeding legumes were screened in Zones 6, 7,
and 8 (from the Gulf Coast to northern Tennessee, and from Georgia
to western Arkansas). TIBBEE crimson clover (Trifolium incarnatum)
was used as a phenological check. Growth was terminated 2 to 3 weeks
after TIBBEE bloomed at each location to identify adapted cover
crops that reseed earlier than TIBBEE. Spotted burclover (Medicago
arabica) and balansa clover were the best reseeding legumes
that were hardy throughout zone 7a. Of these, only balansa clover
is commercially available.
Balansa clover is open pollinated. Flowers vary from white to pink
and are attractive to bees. Ungrazed, it grows up to three feet
high and produces thick hollow stems that are palatable and of good
feed value. It becomes more prostrate when grazed.
Balansa clover was named Trifolium michelianum Savi in
1798. It is sometimes called Trifolium balansae or Trifolium
michelianum subsp. balansae. A landrace of balansa clover collected
in Turkey in 1937 was released in 1952 by the Alabama office of
NRCS with the name MIKE. Small amounts of seed of this accession
are available from the Plant Introduction Station in Athens, Ga.
Balansa clover seed is quite small, so planting only 5 lb. /A gives
a dense stand. Seed is produced commercially only in Australia.
Balansa clover requires a relatively rare inoculant, designated
“Trifolium Special #2” by Liphatech, Inc., manufacturer
of “Nitragin” brand inoculants. Kamprath Seed Co. imports
balansa seed (See Seed
Suppliers). Some seed suppliers offer coated seed that is pre-inoculated.
The price per pound of coated seed is about the same as bare seed,
but 1/3 of the weight is coating so the seeding rate for coated
seed should be increased to 8 lb./A.
PARADANA is the cultivar that has been most widely tested in the
U.S. It was released in 1985 by the South Australia Department of
Agriculture. It was derived from Turkish introductions crossed and
tested at Kangaroo Island, NSW, Australia. Seed yields over 550
lb. /A have been obtained. BOLTA is 1-2 weeks later than PARADANA
and FRONTIER is 2-3 weeks earlier. FRONTIER, a selection out of
PARADANA, has replaced its parent in the seed trade in recent years.
While PARADANA seed matures slightly earlier than crimson clover,
it often does not produce as much biomass. Nitrogen accumulation
in above ground biomass is about 60 lb. /A at full bloom. Balansa
can reseed for several years from a single seed crop, due to its
relatively high amount of hard seed. It reseeded for four years
following maturation of a seed crop in 1993 in Senatobia, Miss.,
and for at least two years in no-till systems at several other locations
in Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi. Neither TIBBEE nor AU ROBIN
crimson clover reseeded for more than one year at any location in
those tests. Balansa clover does not reseed well after tillage,
probably because the small seeds are buried too deeply.
Allowing balansa clover to grow for 40 days past first bloom every
3 to 4 years will allow stands to persist indefinitely in no-till
systems. Reseeded stands are denser, bloom 5 to 7 days earlier,
and are more productive than planted stands because growth begins
as soon as conditions are favorable and seedling density is higher.
However, seed cost is minor compared to opportunity cost and risk
associated with delaying main crop planting. Waiting past the optimum
planting date to encourage reseeding is only practical in rotations
that include main crops optimally planted in May in the Southeastern
U.S.
Balansa is less likely than crimson clovers to host root-knot nematodes
(Meloidogyne incognita, race 3).Gary Windham, USDA-ARS,
Starkville, Miss., found that balansa had egg mass index scores
between 2.3 and 2.9. For comparison, a very resistant white clover
scored 1.5, most crimson clovers score between 3 and 3.5 and very
susceptible crops like REGAL white clover score 5 on a scale from
1 to 5.
—Seth Dabney
USDA-ARS National Sedimentation Lab
P. O. Box 1157 Oxford, MS 38655-2900
662-232-2975; sdabney@ars.usda
.gov
Black oat
Black oat (Avena strigosa L.) is the No. 1 cover crop
on millions of acres of conservation-tilled soybean in southern
Brazil, and has potential for use in the southern USA (Zones 8-10).
Black oat produces large amounts of biomass, similar to rye. It
maintains a narrower carbon to nitrogen (C:N) ratio than rye so
it cycles nitrogen better than rye, important for nitrogen management
in conservation tillage systems. It breaks disease cycles for wheat
and soybean and is resistant to root-knot nematodes. It is very
resistant to rusts and has exceptional allelopathic activity for
weed control. It is easy to kill mechanically.
Black oat is adapted for use as a winter cover crop in the lower
Coastal Plain of the USA, including Zones 8b-10a. It has done well
in fall plantings in Zone 8b, but winterkilled one year of six at
some locations within this zone, dependent on planting date.
Planting dates are similar to common oat. If planted too early,
it is more susceptible to winterkill and lodging. Planting in late
winter (early February) yielded good biomass and ground cover for
late planted cash crops in the lower Coastal Plain.
Seed 50-70 lb. /A for use as a cover crop, 40 lb./A for seed production.
In the Southeast, fall plantings (November) result in seed ripening
in mid May through early June. Seed yields range from 800 to 1400
lb./A. Seed is available commercially in limited amounts.
One cultivar, SOILSAVER, was selected for increased cold tolerance
and released by Auburn University and IAPAR (Institute of Agronomy
of Paraná, Brazil). Auburn University and USDA-ARS researchers
developed it from a population of IAPAR-61-IBIPORA, a public variety
from the Institute of Agronomy of Parana, Brazil (IAPAR) and the
Parananese Commission for Evaluation of Forages (CPAF).
SOILSAVER black oat has several advantages as a cover crop. It
tillers well, producing good soil coverage in relation to total
biomass produced. It suppresses broadleaf weeds extremely well.
In one study, weed control in conservation tillage cotton (Gossypium
hirsutum L.) averaged 34% with black oat compared to 26% for
rye, 19% for wheat, and 16% with no cover crop.
—D. W. Reeves
Research Leader
USDA-ARS, J. Phil Campbell Sr. Natural Resource Conservation Center
1420 Experiment Station Road
Watkinsville, Ga 30677
706-769-5631 ext. 203
fax 706-769-8962
Wayne.Reeves@ars.usda.gov
Additional Information:
SoilSaver— a Black Oat Winter Cover Crop for the Lower Southeastern
Coastal Plain. 2002. USDA-ARS National Soil Dynamics Lab. Conservation
Systems Fact Sheet No. 1.
www.ars.usda.gov/SP2UserFiles/Place/64200500/csr/FactSheets/FS01.pdf
Lupin
Lupins are cool-season annual legumes that provide plenty of N and
can be grown widely in the USA and southern Canada. Lupins have
aggressive taproots, especially the narrow-leaf cultivars. You can
kill lupins mechanically or with herbicides. Their hollow stems
crush or break readily, making it easy to plant cash crops using
conservation tillage equipment.
White lupin (Lupinus albus L.) and blue or narrow-leaf
lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.) species were originally
named after their flower colors, but both species now have cultivars
with white, blue or magenta /purple flowers. Blue lupin is adapted
to the lower Coastal Plain and is more readily identified by its
narrow leaflets (about 0.5- inch wide) rather than flower color.
As a fall and winter cover crop in the southeastern USA, white
lupin is the most cold-tolerant. Some cultivars overwinter as far
north as the Tennessee Valley. They typically produce 100 to 150
lb. N/A when fall-planted and killed in early spring.
Seed spring cultivars in early April in the northern U.S. and southern
Canada. Kill in June when they’re at peak biomass (early-bloom
to early-pod stage).
For use as a cover crop, drill lupins no deeper than 1 inch at
70 lb. /A for small-seeded blue varieties to 120 lb. /A for larger-seeded
white varieties. At $30 to $40 per acre, the seed is relatively
expensive. Be sure to inoculate lupin seed with compatible rhizobia.
Three winter-hardy lupin cultivars are readily available on a commercial
scale. TIFWHITE-78 white lupin and TIFBLUE-78 blue or narrow-leaf
lupin were both released by USDA ’s Agricultural Research
Service in the 1980s. These two varieties, and other modern varieties,
are “sweet” types as opposed to “bitter”
types that were widely grown in the South prior to 1950. Sweet varieties
have a low concentration of naturally occurring alkaloids. Sweet
lupin is favored by wildlife, especially deer. Sweet lupin cover
crops may act as a trap crop for thrips (Frankliniella spp.)
in cotton plantings, but this has yet to be confirmed by research.
AU HOMER bitter white lupin is a new release by Auburn University
derived from Tifwhite-78. It was selected for increased alkaloid
content for use as a cover crop. Alkaloids make lupin seed and forage
unpalatable for livestock, but also play a major role in resistance
to disease, insects and nematodes.
Lupins are susceptible to many fungal and viral diseases and should
not be grown in the same field in successive years. Rather, rotate
lupin cover crops with a small grain cover crop, ideally in a rotation
that allows three years between lupin plantings. Lupin are intolerant
to poorly drained soils.
For information about lupins and seed sources, contact: Edzard
van Santen, Professor Crop Science, Agronomy & Soils Dept.,
202 Funchess Hall, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849; 334-844-3975;
fax 334-887-3945 vanedza@auburn.edu
Sunn Hemp
A tropical legume, sunn hemp (Crotalaria juncea L.) can
produce more than 5,000 lb. dry matter/A and 120 lb. N/A in just
nine to 12 weeks. It can fill a narrow niche between harvest of
a summer crop and planting of a fall cash or cover crop and is especially
fitted to vegetable production. Sunn hemp sown by September 1 following
a corn crop in Alabama, for example, can produce an average of 115
lb. N/A by December 1.
Sunn hemp is not winter hardy and a hard freeze easily kills it.
Sow sunn hemp a minimum of nine weeks before the average date of
the first fall freeze. Seed at 40 to 50 lb. /A, with a cowpea-type
inoculant.
Sunn hemp seed is expensive, about $2.25/lb., so the cost may be
prohibitive for large-scale plantings. Seed can be produced only
in tropical areas, such as Hawaii, and currently is imported only
by specialty seed companies.
A New Alternative for South Florida Producers
A study by the NRCS Plant Materials Center (PMC) in Brooksville,
Florida, concluded that sunn hemp seed can be a viable alternative
cash crop for southern Florida growers. Sunn hemp is an annual legume
that suppresses some types of nematodes and can produce over 5,000
pounds of biomass and 100 pounds of nitrogen per acre within a few
months. Because of its potential use in alternative pest management
systems and as a sustainable biological source of nitrogen, sunn
hemp is a promising cover crop for rotation with vegetables throughout
the Southeastern U.S.
Unfortunately, its use has been limited by the high seed cost—most
is shipped from Hawaii as seed production requires a tropical climate.
Two years ago, the NRCS PMC in Brooksville initiated a study to
determine which zones in Florida could most economically produce
sunn hemp seed. Seed was distributed to 15 growers throughout Florida
and although many locations lost their crop to frost, sunn hemp
stands in coastal counties below the 27th parallel consistently
produced up to 370 pounds of seed per acre. Growers in more southern
areas, such as Homestead, obtained even higher yields. Your contact
is Clarence Maura, Manager, NRCS Brookville Plant Materials Center,
at 352-796-9600 or clarence.maura@fl.usda.gov.
A management caution: Many Crotalaria species contain
alkaloids that are poisonous to livestock. However, the sunn hemp
variety TROPIC SUN, developed jointly by the University of Hawaii
and USDA-NRCS, has a very low level of alkaloid and is suitable
for use as a forage.
Research suggests that sunn hemp is resistant and/or suppressive
to root-knot (Meloidogyne spp.) and reniform (Rotylenchulus
reniformis) nematodes.
—D. Wayne Reeves (see Black Oats)
Additional Information:
Mansoer, Z., D. W. Reeves and C. W. Wood. 1997. Suitability of sunn
hemp as an alternative late-summer legume cover crop. Soil Sci.
Soc. Am. J. 61:246-253.
Balkcom, K. and D. W. Reeves. 2005. Sunn hemp utilized as a legume
cover crop for corn production. Agron. J. 97:26-31.
Sunn Hemp: A Cover Crop for Southern and Tropical Farming Systems.
USDA-NRCS Soil Quality Technical Note No. 10.May 1999. Available
at: http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/management/files/sq_atn_10.pdf
K. H. Wang and R. McSorley. Management of Nematodes and Soil Fertility
with Sunn Hemp Cover Crop. 2004. University of Florida Cooperative
Extension. Publication #ENY-717. http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/NG043
Valenzuela, H. and J. Smith. 2002. Tropic Sun’ Sunnhemp.
University of Hawaii Cooperative Extension. Publication #SA-GM-11.
http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/sustainag/GreenManures/tropicsunnhemp.asp
Top | Appendix C
SEED SUPPLIERS
|