1 / 20

Anne-Kristin Løes, Bioforsk Organic Food and Farming

Repeated undersowing of clover in organic cereal production. Nutrient dynamics and sustainability. Anne-Kristin Løes, Bioforsk Organic Food and Farming Trond M. Henriksen, Hedmark University College Ragnar Eltun, Bioforsk Arable Crops. Experimental field August 2002. Red clover and oats.

Télécharger la présentation

Anne-Kristin Løes, Bioforsk Organic Food and Farming

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Repeated undersowing of clover in organic cereal production. Nutrient dynamics and sustainability. Anne-Kristin Løes, Bioforsk Organic Food and Farming Trond M. Henriksen, Hedmark University College Ragnar Eltun, Bioforsk Arable Crops Experimental field August 2002. Red clover and oats.

  2. Outline • Background and aim of the project • Experimental design • Results: Cereal yields, N balance, P and K dynamics • Conclusions • Consequences

  3. Background • Large and increasing demand for organic cereals (food and fodder) • Main challenges for organic cereal production: Soil structure Nutrient supply, especially N Weeds (perennial)

  4. Project aim • Is repeated undersowing of clover in cereals a well functioning green manuring strategy for commercial grain production on stockless organic farms? • For comparison: One year out of four with a whole-season green manure

  5. Experimental design • Two sites, Kise and Apelsvoll • 6 treatments, 4 replicates, 2002-06 • 2006 = residual effect, barley • 2002-05 = repeated undersowing vs one year of green manure (2003) • Mixing of grass and clover seed Apelsvoll June 2004. Observe residual effects!

  6. Yellow = cereals. Green = clover. Undersown species shown by text.

  7. Experimental design, records • Yields of cereals and straw • Aboveground biomass (AGB) - weeds - undersown crop(s) - cereals Recorded in early spring, mid-summer, at cereal harvest and in late autumn • NPK in AGB, % of dry matter (DM) • Mineral N in soil (Nmin) Early spring and late autumn

  8. Results I. N availability! Apelsvoll, June 2004.Photo Trond M. Henriksen. 1 2 6 5 0 2 5 6 1 0 2 5 0 6 1 6 0 5 2 1 Treatment 0: Weed harrowed, not included in main experiment. Treatment 1: No undersowing, tr. 2 ryegrass undersown. Treatment 5, 6: Red clover ley 2003, established 2002. Treatment 3, 4 (no numbers): Repeated undersowing of clover

  9. Results II. Cereal yields Tons ha-1 (15% water), average for both sites Within year or period, yields with different letters (a, b) are significantly different (p<0.05). Average yield tr. 5+6 2004-05 = 4.80 t/ha vs 3.34 t/ha in tr. 1 (40% increase)

  10. Results III. Green manure biomass Kg N ha-1 in AGB of undersown ryegrass (2), clover (3) or clover+ryegrass (4) at Kise (K) and Apelsvoll (A)

  11. 50 0 Tr. 1 -50 Tr. 2 Tr. 3 -100 Tr. 4 Tr. 5 -150 Tr. 6 -200 -250 Results IV. Accumulated N balance Kg N / ha 2002 2003 2004 2005 N balance = kg N in AGB of undersown green manure in late October x 1.25 minus kg N in cereals removed in September. Average for both sites.

  12. Results V. Nutrient deficiency? NPK concentrations at heading* *) Gorshkova, 1978. Proc. 8th Int Coll Plant Ana, Auckland New Zealand. Ferguson.. (ed). DSIR info service 134.

  13. Results V. Nutrient deficiency? Field experiment, N concentrations at heading. Very deficient!

  14. Results V. Nutrient deficiency? Field experiment, P concentrations at heading.Deficient for oats, especially at Kise. OK for wheat.

  15. Results V. Nutrient deficiency? Field experiment, K concentrations at heading.Deficient, except for oats at Kise 2002

  16. Results VI. Increased P and K availability? Accumulated uptake (2003-2005) of N, P and K in ABG dry matter at heading for treatments 1-4 at Apelsvoll (A) and Kise (K)

  17. Results VI. Increased P and K availability? • Uptake of P and K at heading reflects soil P and K concentrations (Kise 24 mg vs Apelsvoll 63 mg P-AL/kg soil, soil K medium level at both sites) • Uptake of P and K reflects N availability (larger in treatments 3 and 4) • At Apelsvoll (more fertile soil), undersown ryegrass also increased the accumulated P and K uptake (treatment 2) • P and K uptake at heading more close to N uptake than to DM production • This indicates increased bioavailability of P and K by undersown crops (not only N fixating!)

  18. Conclusions • Considerable yield effect of undersown clover. On average, + 30% the subsequent year. In the year of undersowing, slight yield decrease. • Considerable yield effect of one year clover ley. On average +40% in two subsequent years. BUT this is not enough to compensate one year without cereal yields, as compared to repeated undersowing. • The accumulated N-balance was negative in all treatments. Cereal yields removed more N than the green manure produced. • Indications that undersown crops increase the bioavailability of P and K • Possible to combine whole-season green manure and undersown clover? Phytopathological risks!

  19. Consequences and further studies • Cover crops, even those not fixing N, are useful in organic systems (ryegrass conserve N) • What is the impact of soil P and K concentrations on the potential of N fixation? (rather low in this study) • Can the farmers accept a large part of the crop rotation used for green manure (e.g. 2 years of clover ley, 3 years of cereals = 40%)? • If no, what can be an acceptable source of N for organic stockless farms? • Suggestions: Meat and bone meal, human urine

  20. Thanks for your attention

More Related