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FIELD PEAS
Pisum sativum subsp. arvense
Also called: Austrian winter peas (black peas), Canadian
field peas (spring peas)
Type: summer annual and winter annual legume
Roles: plow-down N source, weed suppressor, forage
Mix with: strong-stemmed wheat, rye, triticale or
barley for vertical support
See charts, pp. 66 to 72, for ranking and management summary.
High N-fixers, field peas produce abundant vining forage and contribute
to short-term soil conditioning. Succulent stems break down easily
and are a quick source of available N (361).
Field peas grow rapidly in the cool, moist weather they encounter
as winter annuals in the South and in parts of Idaho, and as early-sown
summer annuals in the Northeast, North Central and Northern Plains
areas. Harvest options as high-quality forage and seed increase
their value.
Winter-hardy types of field peas, especially Austrian winter
peas, can withstand temperatures as low as 10° F with
only minor injury, but they don’t overwinter consistently
in areas colder than moderate Hardiness Zone 6. They are sensitive
to heat, particularly in combination with humidity. They tend to
languish in mid-summer even in the cool Northeast (361),
where average summers have fewer than 30 days exceeding 86°
F. Temperatures greater than 90° F cause flowers to blast and
reduce seed yield. On humus-rich black soils, field peas will produce
abundant viny growth with few seed pods.
Use in the East and Southeast is limited by field peas’ susceptibility
to Sclerotinia crown rot, which can destroy whole fields
during winter in the mid-Atlantic area. Risk of infection increases
if pea crops are grown on the same land in close rotation.
Canadian field peas are a related strain of vining pea. These annual
“spring peas” can outgrow spring-planted winter
peas. They often are seeded with triticale or another small grain.
Spring peas have larger seeds, so there are fewer seeds per pound
and seeding rates are higher, about 100 to 160 lb./A. However, spring
pea seed is a bit less expensive than Austrian winter pea seed.
TRAPPER is the most common Canadian field pea cultivar.
This section focuses on the widely grown Austrian winter pea. “Field
peas” refers to both the winter and spring types.

BENEFITS
Bountiful biomass. Under a long, cool, moist season
during their vegetative stages, Austrian winter peas produce more
than 5,000 lb. dry matter/A, even when planted in spring in colder
climates. Idaho farmers regularly produce 6,000 to 8,000 lb. DM/A
from fall-planted Austrian winter peas. Because the residue breaks
down quickly, only peas in the high-production areas build up much
long-term organic matter. Peas do not make a good organic mulch
for weed control (361).
Nitrogen source. Austrian winter peas are top
N producers, yielding from 90 to 150 lb. N/A, and at times up to
300 lb. N/A.
Plowed down as green manure, fall-planted legume crops of Austrian
winter pea, alfalfa and hairy vetch each produced enough N for the
production of high-quality muskmelons under plastic mulch and drip
irrigation in a Kansas study. Melon yields produced with the legumes
were similar to those receiving synthetic fertilizer at 63 and 90
lb. N/A. The winter peas in the experiment produced 96 lb. N/A the
first year and 207 lb. N/A the second (387).
Austrian winter peas harvested as hay then applied as mulch mineralized
N at more than double the rate of alfalfa hay. The N contribution
was measured the summer after a fall plowdown of the residue. The
estimated N recovery of Austrian winter pea material 10 months after
incorporation was 77 percent—58 percent through spring wheat
and 19 percent in the soil (254).
Austrian winter pea green manure provided the highest spring wheat
yield the following year in a Montana trial comparing 10 types of
medics, seven clovers, yellow biennial sweet clover and three grains.
Crops that produced higher tonnage of green manure usually had a
negative effect on the subsequent wheat crop due to moisture deficiency
that continued over the winter between the crops (381).
Field peas can leave 80 lb. N/A if terminated at mid-season in lieu
of summer fallow in dryland areas, or leave more than 30 lb. N/A
after pea harvest at season’s end (74).
A winter pea green manure consistently resulted in higher malting
barley protein content than that following other legumes or fallow
in a Montana trial. Annual legumes harvested for seed left less
soil N than did plots in fallow. Also tested were fava bean, lentil,
chickpea, spring pea, winter pea hay and dry bean (262).
Rotational effects. Pulse crops (grain legumes
such as field peas, fava beans and lentils) improved sustainability
of dryland crop rotations by providing disease suppression, better
tilth and other enhancements to soil quality in a Saskatchewan study.
Even at rates of 180 lb. N/A, fertilizer alone was unable to bring
yields of barley planted into barley residue to the maximum achieved
from these pulse residues (163).
Water thrifty. In a comparison of water use alongside
INDIANHEAD lentils and GEORGE black medic, Austrian winter pea was
the most moisture- efficient crop in producing biomass. Each crop
had used 4 inches of water when Austrian winter pea vines were 16
inches long, the lentils were 6 to 8 inches tall and the black medic
central tillers were 4 inches tall (383).
Austrian winter peas grown in a controlled setting at 50° F
recorded more than 75 percent of its N2 fixed per unit of water
used by the 63rd day of growth. White clover, crimson clover and
hairy vetch reached the same level of water efficiency, but it took
105 days (334).
Quick growing. Rapid spring growth helps peas
out compete weeds and make an N contribution in time for summer
cash crops in some areas.
Forage booster. Field peas grown with barley,
oat, triticale or wheat provide excellent livestock forage. Peas
slightly improve forage yield, but significantly boost protein and
relative feed value of small grain hay.
Seed crop. Seed production in Montana is about
2,000 lb./A and about 1,500 lb./A in the Pacific Northwest. Demand
is growing for field peas as food and livestock feed (74).
Long-term bloomer. The purple and white blossoms
of field peas are an early and extended source of nectar for honeybees.
Chill tolerant. Austrian winter pea plants may
lose some of their topgrowth during freezes, but can continue growing
after temperatures fall as low as 10° F. Their shallow roots
and succulent stems limit their overwintering ability, however.
Sustained cold below 18° F without snow cover usually kills
Austrian winter pea (202).
To maximize winter survival:
Select
the most winter-hardy cultivars available— GRANGER, MELROSE
and COMMONWINTER.
Seed
early enough so that plants are 6 to 8 inches tall before soil
freezes, because peas are shallow rooted and susceptible to heaving.
Try to plant from mid-August to mid- September in Zone 5.
Plant
into grain stubble or a rough seedbed, or interseed into a winter
grain. These environments protect young pea roots by suppressing
soil heaving during freezing and thawing. Trapped snow insulates
plants, as well.
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FIELD PEAS
(Pisum sativum subsp. arvense) |
MANAGEMENT
Establishment & Fieldwork
Peas prefer well-limed, well-drained clay or heavy loam soils, near-neutral
pH or above and moderate fertility. They also do well on loamy sands
in North Carolina. Field peas usually are drilled 1 to 3 inches
deep to ensure contact with moist soil and good anchoring for plants.
If you broadcast peas, incorporation will greatly improve stands,
as seed left exposed on the surface generally does not germinate
well. Longvined plants that are shallow-seeded at low seeding rates
tend to fall over (lodge), lay against the soil and rot. Combat
this tendency by planting with a small grain nurse crop such as
oats, wheat, barley, rye or triticale. Reduce the pea seeding rate
by about one quarter—and grain by about one third—when
planting a pea/grain mix.
Planted at 60 to 80 lb./A in Minnesota, Austrian winter peas make
a good nurse crop for alfalfa.
Field pea seed has a short shelf life compared with other crops.
Run a germination test if seed is more than two years old and adjust
seeding rate accordingly. If you haven’t grown peas in the
seeded area for several years, inoculate immediately before seeding.
West. In mild winter areas of California and Idaho,
fall-plant for maximum yield. In those areas, you can expect spring-planted
winter peas to produce about half the biomass as those that are
fall-planted. Seed by September 15 in Zone 5 of the Inter-Mountain
region in protected valleys where you’d expect mild winter
weather and good, long-term snow cover. October-planted Austrian
winter pea in the Zone 9 Sacramento Valley of California thrive
on cool, moist conditions and can contribute 150 lb. N/A by early
April.
The general rule for other parts of the semi-arid West where snow
cover is dependable is to plant peas in the fall after grain harvest.
In these dry regions of Montana and Idaho, overseed peas at 90 to
100 lb./A by “frostseeding” any time soils have become
too cold for pea germination. Be sure residue cover is not too dense
to allow seed to work into the soil through freeze/thaw cycles as
the soil warms (383).
In the low-rainfall Northern Plains, broadcast clear stands of
peas in early spring at a similar rate for the “Flexible Green
Manure” cropping system (below). Seeding at about 100 lb./A
compensates somewhat for the lack of incorporation and provides
strong early competition with weeds (383).
Plant as soon as soil in the top inch reaches 40° F to make
the most of spring moisture (74).
A mixture of Austrian winter peas and a small grain is suitable
for dryland forage production because it traps snow and uses spring
moisture to produce high yields earlier than spring-seeded annual
forages (74). With sufficient
moisture, spring peas typically produce higher forage yields than
Austrian winter peas.
East. Planted as a companion crop in early spring
in the Northeast, Austrian winter peas may provide appreciable N
for summer crops by Memorial Day (361).
In the mid-Atlantic, Austrian winter peas and hairy vetch planted
October 1 and killed May 1 produced about the same total N and corn
yields (108).
Southeast. Seed by October 1 in the inland Zone
8 areas of the South so that root crowns can become established
to resist heaving. Peas produce more biomass in the cooler areas
of the South than where temperatures rise quickly in spring (74,
361). Peas planted in late
October in South Carolina ’s Zone 8 and terminated in mid-
to late April produce 2,700 to 4,000 lb. dry matter/A (23).
Peas Do Double Duty for Kansas Farmer
PARTRIDGE, Kan.—Jim French figures Austrian
winter peas provide free grazing, free nitrogen, or both.
The vining legume produces just as much N for the following
grain sorghum crop even if he lets his registered Gelbvieh
herd eat all they want of the winter annual’s spring
growth.
French farms on flat, well-drained sandy loam
soil near Partridge, Kan. He manages about 640 acres each
of cash crops (winter wheat and grain sorghum) and forages
(alfalfa, sudangrass, winter peas and cowpeas, and an equal
area in grass pasture). Peas follow wheat in the three-year
crop rotation on his southcentral Kansas farm. He chisel plows
the wheat stubble twice about 7 inches deep, disks once to
seal the surface, then controls weeds as necessary with a
light field cultivator.
Between mid-September and mid-October he inoculates
about 30 lb./A of the peas and drills them with an old John
Deere double-run disk drill in 8-inch rows. Establishment
is usually good, with his only anxiety coming during freeze-thaw
cycles in spring. “Each time the peas break dormancy,
start to grow, then get zapped with cold again they lose some
of their root reserves and don’t have quite the resistance
to freezing they did. They'll sprout back even if there’s
vegetative freeze damage as long as their food reserves hold
out,” French reports.
Ironically, this spring freezing is less of
a problem further north where fields stay frozen longer before
a slower thaw. This works as long as snow cover protects the
peas from the colder early and mid-winter temperatures. In
most years, he sets up temporary fence and turns his cattle
into the peas about April 1 at the stocking rate of two animal
units per acre. During the best years of mild weather and
adequate moisture, “the cattle have a hard time keeping
up,” says French. Depending on his need for forage or
organic matter, he leaves the cattle in until he incorporates
the pea stubble, or gives it time to regrow.
One reason he gets about the same 90 to 120
lb. N/A contribution with or without grazing is that the winter
pea plants apparently continue N fixation and root growth
while being grazed. Soil tests show that 25 to 30 lb. N/A
are available in the nitrate form at incorporation in late
spring, with the balance in an organic form that mineralizes
over the summer. Grazing the peas helps to contain cheatgrass,
which tends to tie up N if it’s incorporated just ahead
of his sorghum crop.
French is sold on winter peas ahead of his grain
sorghum because it provides N while reducing weed pressure
from cheatgrass and pigweed and decreasing lodging from charcoal
root rot. The option to use the peas as forage—while
still achieving adequate sorghum yield—lets him buy
less processed feed, improves livestock health and accelerates
conversion of the peas’ organic material into available
soil nutrients.
“Winter peas work best where you integrate
crops and livestock,” says French. “They give
you so many benefits.” |
Killing
Peas are easily killed any time with herbicides, or by disking or
mowing after full bloom, the stage of maturity that provides the
optimum N contribution. Disk lightly to preserve the tender residue
for some short-term erosion control.
The downside to the quick breakdown of pea vines is their slimy
condition in spring if they winterkill, especially in dense, pure
stands. Planting with a winter grain provides some protection from
winterkill and reduces matting of dead pea vegetation.
Pest Management
Winter peas break crop disease cycles, Ben Burkett of Petal, Miss.,
has found. Septoria leaf spot problems on his cash crops
are reduced when he plants Austrian winter pea in fall after snap
beans and ahead of collards and mustard greens the next summer.
Between October 15 and November 15, Burkett broadcasts just 50 lb./A
then incorporates the seed with a shallow pass of his field cultivator.
They grow 3 to 6 inches tall before going dormant in late December
in his Zone 8 location about 75 miles north of the Gulf of Mexico.
Quick regrowth starts about the third week in January. He kills
them in mid-April by disking, then shallow plows to incorporate
the heavy residue (202).
Farmers and researchers note several IPM cautions, because Austrian
winter peas:
Host
some races of nematodes
Are
susceptible to winter Sclerotinia crown rot, Fusarium
root rot as well as seed rot and blights of the stem, leaf or
pod
Are
variably susceptible to the Ascochyta blight (MELROSE
cultivar has some resistance)
Host
the pathogen Sclerotinia minor. There was a higher incidence
of leaf drop in California lettuce planted after Austrian winter
peas in one year of a two-year test (232).
Austrian winter peas were heavily damaged by Sclerotinia trifoliorum
Eriks in several years of a four-year study in Maryland, but the
crop still produced from 2,600 to 5,000 lb. dry matter/A per year
in four out of five years. One year DM production was only 730 lb./A
. Mean N contribution despite the disease was 134 lb. N/A . Overall,
Austrian winter peas were rated as being more suited for Maryland
Coastal Plain use than in the Piedmont, due to harsher winters in
the latter location (204).
To combat disease, rotate cover crops to avoid growing peas in
the same field in successive years. To minimize disease risk, waiting
several years is best. To minimize risk of losing cover crop benefits
to Sclerotinia disease in any given season, mix with another
cover crop such as cereal rye.
Crop Systems
Northern Plains. Austrian winter peas (and other
grain legumes) are increasingly used instead of fallow in dryland
cereal rotations. The legumes help prevent saline seeps by using
excess soil moisture between cereal crops. They also add N to the
system. The legume>cereal sequence starts with a spring- or fall-planted
grain legume (instead of fallow), followed by a small grain.
Peas work well in this system because they are shallow-rooted and
therefore do not extract deep soil moisture. The pea crop is managed
according to soil moisture conditions. Depending on growing season
precipitation, the peas can be grazed, terminated or grown to grain
harvest. Growers terminate the crop when about 4 inches of plant
available water remains in the soil, as follows:
Below-normal
rainfall—terminate the grain legume early.
Adequate
rainfall—terminate the grain legume when about
4 inches of soil water remains. Residue is maintained for green
manure, moisture retention and erosion prevention.
Above-average
rainfall—grow the crop to maturity for grain harvest.
In conventional fallow systems, fields are left unplanted to accumulate
soil moisture for the cash crop. Weeds are controlled using tillage
or herbicides.
Grain legumes provide a soil-protecting alternative to fallow that
can be managed to ensure adequate moisture for the cereal crop.
Legumes provide long-term benefits by producing N for the subsequent
crop, disrupting disease, insect and weed cycles and building soil.
Austrian winter peas work in these rotations where there is at
least 18 inches of rain per year. INDIANHEAD lentils (Lens culinaris
Medik), a specialty lentil for cover crop use, are also widely used
in this system.
Montana research shows that when soil moisture is replenished by
winter precipitation, annual legumes can substitute for fallow without
significantly reducing the yield of the next barley crop. Montana
rainfall averages 12-16 inches, so peas are planted but can only
be taken to grain harvest in above-normal rainfall years. The legume
can generate income from harvest of its hay or grain or through
fertilizer N savings from the legume’s contribution to the
small grain crop (136).
In Idaho, fall-seeded Austrian winter peas harvested for seed provided
income, residual N from the pea straw and soil disease suppression
in a study of efficient uses of the legume cover. A crop rotation
of Austrian winter pea (for grain)>winter wheat>spring barley
produced similar wheat yields as did using the peas as green manure
or leaving the field fallow in the first year. While neither Austrian
winter pea green manure nor fallow produced income, the green manure
improved soil organic matter and added more N for wheat than did
summer fallow. Fallow caused a net soil capacity loss by “mining”
finite soil organic matter reserves (253).
In a northern Alberta comparison of conventional (tilled), chemical
(herbicide) and green (field pea) fallow systems, spring-planted
field peas provided 72 lb. N/A, significantly more than the other
systems. The field pea system was also more profitable when all
inputs were considered, providing higher yield for two subsequent
cash crops, higher income and improvement of soil quality (12).
Southeast. Fall-seeded Austrian winter peas outproduced
hairy vetch by about 18 percent in both dry matter and N production
in a three-year test in the Coastal Plain of North Carolina. When
legumes were grown with rye, wheat or spring oats, Austrian winter
pea mixtures also had the highest dry matter yields. Over the three
years, Austrian winter peas ranked the highest (dry-matter and N)
in the legume-only trials and as the legume component of the legume/grain
mixtures. In descending order after the peas were hairy vetch, common
vetch and crimson clover. The peas were sown at 54 lb./A in the
pure seedings and 41 lb./A in mixtures (344).
In the year of greatest N fixation, soil N in the Austrian winter
pea mixture treatments was 50 percent greater than the average of
all other treatments. Researchers noted that the bottom leaves of
pea vines were more decomposed than other legumes, giving the crop
an earlier start in N contribution. Further, soil N in the upper
6 inches of soil under the Austrian winter peas held 30 to 50 percent
of the total soil inorganic N in the winter pea treatments, compared
with levels of less than 30 percent in the top soil layer for all
other treatments. In situations where the early-summer N release
from peas could be excessive, mixing Austrian winter peas with a
grain can moderate the N contribution and slow down its release
into the soil (344).
The carbon to nitrogen (C:N) ratio of plant matter is an indication
of how rapidly vegetation will break down. Mixtures of small grains
with Austrian winter peas and the vetches had C:N values from 13
to 34, but were generally under 25 to 30, the accepted threshold
for avoiding net immobilization of N (344).
Austrian winter peas and crimson clover can provide adequate N
for conventionally planted cotton in South Carolina. In a three-year
trial, fertilizer rates of up to 150 lb. N/A made no improvement
to cotton yield on the pea plots. The evaluation showed that soil
nitrate under Austrian winter peas peaked about nine weeks after
incorporation (22).
Austrian winter peas achieved 50 to 60 percent groundcover when
they were overseeded at about 75 lb./A into soybeans at leaf yellowing
in southeastern Pennsylvania, where they can survive some winters.
The peas produced nearly 2 tons of dry matter and 130 lb. N/A by
May 20 in this test (191).Overseeding
peas into corn at last cultivation is not recommended due to poor
shade tolerance.
Austrian winter peas, like other hollowstemmed succulent covers
such as vetch and fava beans, do not respond well to mowing or cutting
after they begin to bloom. In their earlier stages, Austrian winter
peas will regrow even when grazed several times. See Peas
Do Double Duty for Kansas Farmer.
After three years of moisture testing, Kansas farmer Jim French
can explain why he sees more soil moisture after spring grazing
than when the peas are left to grow undisturbed. “There’s
decreasing overall transpiration because there’s less leaf
area to move moisture out of the soil into the air. Yet the rootmass
is about the same.” Ungrazed peas pump more water as they
keep growing.
Other Options
Harvest field peas for hay when most of the pods are well formed.
Use a mower with lifting guards and a windrow attachment to handle
the sprawling vines.
COMPARATIVE NOTES
Field peas won’t tolerate field traffic due to succulent
stems (191). When selecting
types, remember that long-vined varieties are better for weed control
than short-vined types.
Cultivars. MELROSE, known for its winterhardiness,
is a cultivar of the Austrian winter pea type. Planted the first
week of September in Idaho, MELROSE peas yielded 300 lb. N/A and
6 tons of dry matter the next June. Planted in mid- April, the cultivar
yielded “just” 175 lb. N/A and 3.5 T dry matter/A (202).
GRANGER is an improved winter pea that has fewer leaves and more
tendrils, which are stiffer than standard cultivars. It is more
upright and its pods dry more quickly than other winter pea types.
MAGNUS field peas have out-produced Austrian winter peas in California
and bloom up to 60 days earlier.
Seed sources. See Seed
Suppliers.
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