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Published byMaddison Neagle Modified over 9 years ago
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Comparison of Reduced Tillage Cropping Systems for Onions Mulched No-Till vs. Cover Cropped Ridge Till
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Fall Oats Growing on Ridges
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Following Spring Mulch of Winterkilled Oats on Ridges
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Mulch No-Till Slit made in soil for hand planting onions Ridge-Till top removed Lightly tilled Cover Crop Ridge-Till Hand planted onions Stuttgart cooking onions
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Mulch No-Till Mulch of wheat straw in valleys for moisture and erosion control C.C. Ridge-Till 2 cultivations Single seed hairy vetch as living mulch for erosion control
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Mulch No-Till Cover Crop Ridge-Till
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Soil Moisture No-Till Ridge-Till Rainfall Soil Water Potential Date Rainfall (in)
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Moisture: Scale No Irrigation, => more moisture better 0 = 0 100 = 100 Results: No till with mulch CC. Ridge till Average Moisture Reading8966
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Soil Temperature
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Soil Temperature: Scale and Results No significant difference between treatments Ideal temperature for onions: – 55 o – 75 o F during growth In dry/hot year, no-till would conserve more moisture and stable temperature Both treatments scaled: 100 for moderate & = temperatures
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Soil Quality No Till + Mulch Average Ridge Till + vetch Average 12 worms/ft 3 Earthworm Count Infiltration Nutrient Levels 41.4 in/hr40.3 in/hr P Below optimumAll optimum
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Soil Quality Discussion and Scale Slightly lower P 2 O 5 in mulched no-till: Possibly due to leaching of nutrients through constant saturation and high infiltration rate Experiential double-cropping with brassicas after onion harvest supports lab finding of less than optimum P Earthworm results: Optimum soil health indication = 25/ft 3 Varies with: time of day, soil moisture levels This sample: 4 pm, hot day => still high Mulched No-Till C.C. Ridge Till Scale approximations: 75 85 (out of 100)
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Differing Field Labor & Input Costs* (per 300 ft. row) Mulched Cover Crop + Labor ($10/hr) No-till Ridge-till Seedbed Preparation 3 min 6 min Cultivation ----- 8 min Mulching1 hr 30 min ----- Interseeding and ----- 5 min Vine Trimming Hand-weeding 1 hr 45 min 35 min Materials Mulch $9.00 ----- Vetch Seed ----- $0.30 Total:$42.00 $9.30 * Does not include onion seed, harvesting, processing, & marketing
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Differing Field Labor & Inputs: Scale 100 = $0 input 0 = $100 Results: Mulch No tillCC. Ridge till Input:$42.00$9.30 Scale:5891
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Yield & Quality
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Yield Sample Mulch No- TillC.C. Ridge Till Total #74 Rotten #817 Good #6655 Yield lbs39.531.75 Avg lbs per bulb0.60.59 # Crates per Row7.55.75
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Yield: Scale 100 = 8 crates (= ~10 ton/acre) 0 = 0 crates Results: 7294Scale 5.757.5Crates CC. Ridge till No till with mulch Yield difference primarily due to lower incidence of Fusarium Bottom Rot in no-till onions. This was also observed in no-till onions in other fields.
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Profit Margin = (Crop Value – Cost of differing inputs & field work)* Straw Mulched No-Till: $ 240** - $ 42 = $ 192/row * Does not include onion seed, harvesting, processing, & marketing Cover Crop Ridge-Till: $ 184** - $ 9 = $ 175/row Scale: 75 Scale: 68 100 = $256** ($12,800/acre) ** $32.00/crate, assumes $0.80/lb. and 20% loss due to shrinkage and disease
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Moisture Crop Value – Partial Crop Production Cost YieldSoil Quality Soil Temperature Inputs Ridge-Tillage with Vetch vs. No-till Ridges with Straw Mulch
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Soil moisture –Mulched no-till preserves more moisture during low rainfall, high temperatures, and crop bulbing-up, which could affect yields. –Mulched no-till also provided more disease suppression in wet weather –Caused more leaching of nutrients Soil moisture & temperature were similar in 2003 No-till yields and Ridge-till yields were same in 2003 Graphical Representation: –Does not show definitive “better” growing technique –Grower’s perspective: ridge-till requires less labor during busy season, but no-till promises more dependable yield and crop quality Summary of Results
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