National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration enhanced image shows the Mississippi River watershed and the "dead zone" from fertilizer runoff in the Gulf of Mexico. |
Iowa farmers typically plant a field in corn one year and soybeans the next. Research at Iowa State University has shown advantages to "a three-year system that adds a cool-season small grain (such as oats) with a cover crop of red clover that acts as a 'green manure,' and a four-year system that includes a small grain (again, oats) with a green manure of alfalfa, followed by a second year of alfalfa for harvest," says the Union of Concerned Scientists. "The researchers have found that the longer rotations enhanced yields and profits while reducing pesticide use and pollution."
Iowa farmer Seth Watkins follows a version of that system, which he discussed at the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation's "Ocean Week" in Washington, D.C. last month. The Register lauds Watkins' approach to farming, but cautions that the government must provide better incentives to farmers who want to follow in his footsteps. "Federal farm policy got us into the two-crop system, and it can help get us out."
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2uiqUYj Innovative crop rotation can save money and help the environment, Iowa researchers find - Entrepreneur Generations
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