Author:
ALLISON M. F.,ARMSTRONG M. J.,JAGGARD K. W.,TODD A. D.
Abstract
Between 1989 and 1993, 17 experiments tested the
effects of autumn-sown cover crops on the yield,
processing quality and N nutrition of subsequent sugarbeet
crops. Cover crops had no effect on
sugarbeet plant population density or pesticide requirement.
In nitrogen response experiments, the
mean beet yield at the economic optimum was 83 t/ha.
The mean N fertilizer requirement was
96 kg N/ha and the N uptake at maximum yield averaged
180 kg N/ha. Cover crops had no effect
on yield, fertilizer requirement or N uptake. In addition,
cover crops generally had no effect on the
efficiency of N fertilizer use, the mineralization of N
from the soil organic matter nor the amount of
soil mineral nitrogen at sowing or at harvest of the beet
crop. Processing quality was also not affected
by cover crops. The cost of growing a cover crop ranged
from 0 to 50 £/ha. Since these costs cannot
be offset against increases in yields or reduced
fertilizer application rates, cover crops need to be low
cost, i.e. cheap seed and minimal cultivation. Cover
crops using volunteer cereals and weeds or farm-saved
grain that are established with a single stubble-cultivation
should fulfil these criteria.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
9 articles.
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