TARGETING PERENNIAL/BIOMASS CROPS TO SENSITIVE AREAS Claire Baffaut USDA-ARS Cropping Systems and Water Quality Research Unit Columbia, MO Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Rills from 4/2012 storm after planting Following a 3” rain, the soil from the planted rows is gone, at least 2” Planted and germinated corn is now exposed
Rills in the Centralia plots 4/21/2010
Top soil depth along Plot 18 Close to 8” Less than 2.5” Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Top soil depth along Plot 11 Close to 8” Less than 2.5” Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Top soil depth along Plot 9 Close to 7” Less than 2” Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Average measured soybean yields CS1 – Mulch till Backslope soybean yields significantly lower than summit or footslope yields. Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Average measured soybean yields CS2 – No-till Backslope soybean yields significantly lower than footslope yields Dry year but footslope has enough moisture. Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Average measured corn yields CS1 – Mulch till Backslope corn yields significantly lower than footslope yields, but no difference with summit yields. Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Average measured corn yields CS2 – No-till No significant difference between any position! Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Runoff quantity and quality Two indices were good predictors of areas generating the highest loadings of runoff, sediment, and atrazine: CCI= Ksat * depth_to_clay/ Slope CPI= depth_to_clay / Slope Runoff Atrazine Sediment
A progressive phenomenon: 100 years Depth to clay in Field 1Erosion ranges Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO Topsoil loss (in)
Perennial Crops on degraded slopes? Switchgrass bufferAdvantages Does not displace food producing acres. Does well because roots go through the claypan May help remediate the degradation Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
Simulated water quality effects of mid- slope buffers in Field 1 Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO ScenarioBest Management PracticesPercent change (%) Runoff Sediment Yield Dissolved Atrazine in Surface Runoff Baseline No BMPs applied, mulch till corn-soybean--- 1 Switchgrass in all sensitive areas (66% of field), rest of field under mulch till corn- soybean acre area immediately before the field outlet managed as filter strip in fescue, rest of field under mulch till corn-soybean Switchgrass in area around main channel rest of the field under mulch till corn- soybean
Testing the hypothesis of water quality improvements Cropping systems for targeted buffers: Mulch till corn – NT soybean NT corn – soybean Water Quality monitored also for: All in switchgrass All in willow Corn-Soybean-Wheat Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO Variables Q, Sediment Dissolved and total nutrients Herbicides
Targeting to the sensitive area Two croping systems were targeted: Corn MT – Soybean NT NT Corn-soybean Buffers were designed: 150 feet Placed on the most sensitive part, according to CPI, a function of slope and depth to clay Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO
What will we learn? Experience in establishing switchgrass on claypan soils Productivity of the system on a larger scale than at the SPARC plots Interactions between the switchgrass and row crop management Impact of row crop production upstream of the switchgrass. Impact of switchgrass production on the tow slope row crop productivity. Water quantity impact of switchgrass production on the sensitive area. Water quality impact of switchgrass production on the sensitive area. Will switchgrass propagate and fill-in the existing rills? Impact of switchgrass production on soil quality. Translating Missouri USDA-ARS Research and Technology into Practice A training session provided by USDA-ARS-CSWQRU, October 2012, Columbia, MO