4.7 Article

Agro-economic prospects for expanding soybean production beyond its current northerly limit in Europe

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY
Volume 133, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eja.2021.126415

Keywords

Organic cropping systems; Gross margin; Protein; Yield stability

Categories

Funding

  1. SusCrop-ERA-NET project LegumeGap [031B0807B]
  2. FACCE-ERA-NET+ project Climate-CAFE [PTJ-031A544]
  3. Innovation Network to Improve Soybean Production under the Global Change (INNISOY) through the European Interest Group CONCERT-Japan [01DR17011A]
  4. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF), Germany [031B0807B, PTJ-031A544, 01DR17011A]
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [420661662]

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The study found that feed-grade soybean cultivars were better adapted to the central European climate compared to food-grade cultivars, providing higher and more stable yields. Irrigation increased soybean grain yields by an average of 41%, with no additional irrigation required in years with sufficient rainfall. Gross margins for organic soybean were higher than other crops, indicating a large agro-economic potential for soybean cultivation in central Europe as a novel grain legume crop.
Soybean is one of the five crops that dominate global agriculture, along with maize, wheat, cotton and rice. In Europe, soybean still plays a minor role and is cultivated mainly in the South and East. Very little is known about the potential for soybean in higher latitudes with relatively cool conditions. To investigate the agronomic potential and limitations of soybean for feed (high grain yield) and food (high protein content, e.g., for tofu production) in higher latitudes, an organic soybean cropping system experiment was carried out from 2015 to 2017 in northeastern Germany. The objectives were: (1) to identify food- and feed-grade soybean cultivars that are adapted to a central European climate in terms of protein, grain yield, and yield stability, (2) to explore the effect of irrigation on soybean protein and grain yield under relatively dry growing conditions, and (3) to determine the agro-economic potential of soybean cultivation for both feed and food markets. Three soybean cultivars were tested with and without irrigation. The soybean feed-grade cultivars 'Sultana' and 'Merlin' were better adapted to the growing cycle and temperature, providing higher and more stable yields (average 2700 kg ha(-1)) than the food-grade cultivar 'Protibus' (average 1300 kg ha(-1)). Irrigation increased soybean grain yields by 41% on average. In the year with sufficient precipitation, no additional irrigation was necessary. Gross margins of organic soybean ranged between 750 (sic) ha(-1) for the rainfed food-grade soybean and 2000 (sic) ha(-1) for the irrigated feed-grade soybean and were higher than other crops. We demonstrated a large agro-economic potential for soybean as a novel grain legume crop to diversify cropping systems and increase the production of protein crops in central Europe.

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