| Literature DB >> 30978240 |
Jason Kaye1, Denise Finney1, Charles White2, Brosi Bradley1, Meagan Schipanski2, Maria Alonso-Ayuso3, Mitch Hunter2, Mac Burgess1, Catalina Mejia1.
Abstract
Cover crops have the potential to be agricultural nitrogen (N) regulators that reduce leaching through soils and then deliver N to subsequent cash crops. Yet, regulating N in this way has proven difficult because the few cover crop species that are well-studied excel at either reducing N leaching or increasing N supply to cash crops, but they fail to excel at both simultaneously. We hypothesized that mixed species cover crop stands might balance the N fixing and N scavenging capabilities of individual species. We tested six cover crop monocultures and four mixtures for their effects on N cycling in an organically managedEntities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30978240 PMCID: PMC6461281 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0215448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Cover crop monoculture and mixture seeding rates.
| Number of Species | Clover | Pea | Rye | Oat | Canola | Radish | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | Abbreviation | Next Crop | ———————live seeds m-2——————— | ||||||
| Fallow control | Fallow | 0 | |||||||
| Medium red clover | Clover | 1 | 600 | ||||||
| Austrian winter pea | Pea | 1 | 60 | ||||||
| Canola | Canola | 1 | 400 | ||||||
| Forage radish | Radish | 1 | 60 | ||||||
| Oat | Oat | 1 | 300 | ||||||
| Cereal rye | Rye | 1 | 500 | ||||||
| 3 species weed | 3SppW | 3 | 300 | 250 | 150 | ||||
| 3 species nitrogen | 3SppN | Maize | 3 | 300 | 30 | 100 | |||
| 3 species nitrogen | 3SppN | Soybean | 3 | 250 | 150 | 50 | |||
| 4 species | 4Spp | Maize | 4 | 300 | 30 | 100 | 200 | ||
| 4 species | 4Spp | Soybean | 4 | 30 | 100 | 200 | 50 | ||
| 6 species | 6Spp | 6 | 150 | 15 | 100 | 75 | 100 | 20 | |
Republished from [28] under a CC BY license, with permission from American Society of Agronomy Inc, original copyright 2017.
Fig 1Nitrogen in aboveground cover crop and weed tissues.
Values are means (n = 12 replicates) across all three sampling years. Top panels (A and B) are fall biomass and bottom panels (C and D) are spring biomass. Left panels (A and C) are for the cover crop window between wheat and maize and right panels (B and D) are for the window between maize and soybeans. Panel B has an inset on a different scale because of the very low values in this sampling period. Treatments with different lowercase letters had statistically different total cover crop biomass N (Fisher’s LSD, α = 0.05). For spring data (C and D), some species did not over winter, and thus there is no cover crop biomass and no statistical significance reported, though we still plot weed biomass for reference.
The carbon to nitrogen ratio (C:N) in fall and spring in all aboveground cover crop tissues.
| Treatment | Cover crop biomass C:N | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Between wheat and maize | Between maize and soybeans | |||
| Fall | Spring | Fall | Spring | |
| Pea | 11f | 8f | 11 | 10 |
| Clover | 11f | 10e | 11 | 11 |
| Oat | 33a | NA | 14 | NA |
| Radish | 18c | NA | 9 | NA |
| Canola | 21b | 19d | 10 | 12 |
| Rye | 19bc | 33a | 13 | 35 |
| 3SppN | 13e | 23c | 13 | 32 |
| 3SppW | 30a | 29b | 13 | 35 |
| 4Spp | 15d | 22c | 11 | 28 |
| 6Spp | 21b | 24c | 12 | 31 |
| Error | 1 | 2 | NA | NA |
*Between wheat and maize, values are estimated marginal means and standard error from the statistical analysis across all three years of study. Within a season, treatments with different lowercase letters had statistically different total cover crop biomass N (Fisher’s LSD, α = 0.05).
**Data not statistically analyzed because in many cases biomass was below our analysis threshold and results are based on too few analyses. These values do not include weed biomass.
NA—Oat and radish winter kill so there are no spring values for these species.
Fig 2Surface soil inorganic N (SIN) over time.
(A) CC window between wheat and maize and (B) between maize and soybeans. Values are back-transformed estimated marginal means and standard error across at least 2 sampling years (4 replicate treatments measured in 2 or 3 years, so n = 8 or 12).
Fig 3Nitrogen (N) accumulating on resins.
Resins buried beneath cover crop treatments planted between (A) wheat and maize or (B) between maize and soybean. Main bars are back-transformed estimated marginal means and error bars are back-transformed model standard error. Three years of data are averaged in (A) (n = 12) and 2 years for (B)(n = 8). Treatments with different lowercase letters had statistically different N accumulation on resins (Fisher’s LSD, α = 0.05).
Fig 4The concentration of extractable soil inorganic N with depth in spring 2014.
Soils were sampled at the time of CC termination in the windows between (A) wheat and maize and (B) between maize and soybeans. Values are back-transformed means and standard error of n = 4 replicates.
Fig 5Inorganic N collected in lysimeters beneath all cover crop treatments.
Lysimeters were beneath CCs planted between wheat and maize (A) or between maize and soybean (B). Points are means (n = 4) with standard error bars.
Indicators of nitrogen (N) availability to the growing maize silage crop across all cover crop treatments.
| Cover crop preceding maize | SIN AUC | Ear leaf N | Yield | Silage N | Silage N |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fallow | 593bc | 2.46bcd | 35.9bcd | 0.942ab | 116.4cd |
| Pea | 902a | 3.07a | 44.8a | 0.975a | 156.3a |
| Clover | 796a | 2.65bc | 40.1b | 0.966a | 137.7ab |
| Oat | 499cd | 2.37cde | 35.8cd | 0.908ab | 110.7cde |
| Radish | 652b | 2.70b | 39.5bc | 0.933ab | 125.8bc |
| Canola | 572bc | 2.49bcd | 36.0bcd | 0.816c | 102.8de |
| Rye | 400e | 2.14e | 28.6e | 0.792d | 80.0f |
| 3SppN | 590bc | 2.73b | 38.7bc | 0.942bc | 119.2bcd |
| 3SppW | 434de | 2.44bcd | 32.1de | 0.825c | 91.5ef |
| 4Spp | 631b | 2.74b | 37.1bc | 0.908ab | 116.5cd |
| 6Spp | 519c | 2.34de | 36.0bcd | 0.825c | 101.9de |
| Error | 31 | 0.14 | 3.9 | 0.055 | 9.0 |
Values are estimated marginal means and standard error from the statistical analysis across all three years of study.
Columns are: the area under the curve (AUC) of repeated measurements of surface (0–20 cm) soil inorganic N (SIN; units mg N kg dry soil-1), concentration (%; dry mass basis) of N in maize plant leaves that are adjacent to the ear (i.e. ear leaf), maize silage yield adjusted to 65% moisture, silage N concentration (%; dry mass basis), and N contained in the harvested silage crop.
Within a column (N availability indicator), treatments with different lowercase letters were statistically different (Fisher’s LSD, α = 0.05).
Fig 6Seasonal progression of maize height (top panel; left axis), surface soil inorganic N concentrations (top panel; right axis), and maize leaf N concentrations (bottom panel) in four cover crop treatments in 2014. Points are means (n = 4) and one standard error.