4.4 Article

Nitrogen provisioned and recycled by cover crops in monoculture and mixture across two organic farms

Journal

NUTRIENT CYCLING IN AGROECOSYSTEMS
Volume 115, Issue 3, Pages 441-453

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10705-019-10024-1

Keywords

Soil fertility and productivity; Cover crops; Nitrogen; Organic farming; Nutrient cycling

Categories

Funding

  1. Ceres Trust Organic Research Initiative

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Cover crops can supply and recycle soil nitrogen (N) in agroecosystems. With increasing interest in cover crop mixtures, farmers have questions about how N cycling is affected by individual species when planted alone or in mixtures. Field trials were conducted on two organic vegetable farms during the spring and summer of 2014-2016 to quantify biomass tissue N provisioned, soil nitrate (NO3-N) scavenged, and soil NO3-N mineralized from 12 species of cover crops (six spring and six summer species) planted in monoculture or five-way mixtures. All cover crops were compared to weedy and weeded (no cover crops or weeds) controls. Cover crops provisioned 28-33% more biomass tissue N than fallow weeds. Among spring cover crops, field pea produced the most biomass tissue N (131 +/- 13 kg N ha(-1); mean +/- 1 SE) but that benefit disappeared when pea abundance was reduced in mixtures. Soil NO3-N to a depth of 0.2 m was reduced by 50-67% during cover crop and weed growth, regardless of treatment. Soil NO3-N availability approximately 1 month after incorporation of cover crop and weedy residues varied by treatment. Post-incorporation soil NO3-N was 17-19% greater in pea and soybean monocultures compared to mixtures; conversely, soil NO3-N was 17-19% lower following incorporation of buckwheat and sudangrass monocultures compared to mixtures. Results of this study demonstrate that cover crop N recycling services in near-surface soil are largely independent of species or mixture, but N provisioning services require careful management and species selection to ensure maximum biomass tissue N and timely N mineralization.

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