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Cover Crops Lure Beneficial Insects, Improve
Bottom Line in Cotton
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Georgia researchers planted
cotton into rows of legume cover crop mixes to attract insect
predators to prey on damaging worms. Photo by Glynn Tillman,
USDA ARS |
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SARE-funded researchers in Georgia seeking new ways to raise healthy
cotton — traditionally one of the most pest-plagued, thus
one of the most chemically treated commodities — focused on
attracting insects that prey on damaging pests. A group of scientists
from USDA’s Agricultural Research Service, the University
of Georgia, and Fort Valley State University planted a variety of
flowering cover crops amid cotton rows to test whether their blooms
would bring earworm- and budworm-killing predators to minimize the
need for insecticides.
Working on seven mid- and southern Georgia cotton farms, the team
eliminated one insecticide application by planting legume cover
crop mixes that brought predators like the pirate bug, big-eyed
bug and fire ants to prey on damaging worms. Using conservation
tillage to plant cotton amid the cover crops also improved yields
— on average, 2,300 pounds of seed cotton compared to 1,700
pounds on control plots. (Seed cotton weight includes lint and seed
before cleaning.)
Growing a mix of balansa clover, crimson clover, and hairy vetch
prolonged cover crop flowering from early March through late April
and had the added benefit of outcompeting weeds. “With this
range of blooming, we’re able to start building the beneficial
populations early in the season,” said Harry Schomberg, an
ARS ecologist and project leader. “Reducing one application
of insecticides could be pretty substantial on a larger scale like
100 acres.” Glynn Tillman, an ARS entomologist who collaborated
on the project, found that predator bugs moved from the cover crops
into the cotton early in the season, providing more worm control.
Moreover, the conservation tillage and cover crop residue resulted
in more beneficial soil organisms that likely contributed to better
cotton yields.
To demonstrate their results, the team went beyond holding field
days. Tillman introduced the promising cotton-cover crop-conservation
tillage system to hundreds of thousands attending the Sun Belt Ag
Expo in Moultrie, Ga. “It was well received,” Tillman
said, adding that she fielded many questions from growers, some
calling later for more information on adopting cover crops into
integrated pest management systems for cotton.
Schomberg cautions that the system requires careful management.
In the fall, they seeded alternating strips of cereal rye and legume
cover crops. In the spring, they killed the 15-inch-wide strips
of rye with an herbicide and followed by planting cotton in the
same rows, using conservation tillage. “Spacing is key,”
he said. “You have to think about and tinker with your planting
equipment.” Killing cover crops, he added, is easier than
killing a diverse population of winter weeds.
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