Restoring The Soil
Restoring The Soil
Restoring The Soil
Abstract: Cover crops could be considered the backbone of any annual cropping system that seeks to be sustainable.
In this publication we summarize the principal uses and benefits of cover crops and green manures. Brief descriptions
and examples are provided for winter cover crops, summer green manures, living mulches, catch crops, and some
forage crops. To impart a sense of the importance of these practices in sustainable farming, we summarize the
effect of cover crops and green manures on: organic matter and soil structure, nitrogen production, soil microbial
activity, nutrient enhancement, rooting action, weed suppression, and soil and water conservation. Management
issues addressed include vegetation management, limitations of cover crops, use in crop rotations, use in pest
management, and economics of cover crops. A selection of print and Web resources are provided for further reading.
By Preston Sullivan
NCAT Agriculture Specialist
July 2003
Introduction
Cover crop information abounds.
In the past ten years, the number of
research reports, Extension bulletins,
Experiment Station reports, and popu-
lar press articles on cover crops has in-
creased dramatically. For example, the
third quarter 1998 issue of The Journal
of Soil and Water Conservation contains
17 research reports on cover crops. Sev-
eral excellent field handbooks have also
been written. Consequently, rather
than attempting to address that large
body of information, this publication
serves as an overview of cover crops
and their uses and provides a resource
list. The resource list gives ordering
instructions and prices for readers who
want current information in more de-
tail.
©2003 USDA-NRCS
ATTRA is the national sustainable agriculture information service operated by the National Center
for Appropriate Technology, through a grant from the Rural Business-Cooperative Service, U.S.
Department of Agriculture. These organizations do not recommend or endorse products, companies,
or individuals. NCAT has offices in Fayetteville, Arkansas (P.O. Box 3657, Fayetteville, AR 72702),
Butte, Montana, and Davis, California.
Table of Contents
Introduction ................................................................................................................................. 1
Principal Uses of Cover Crops and Green Manures ................................................................... 2
Winter cover crop .................................................................................................................... 2
Summer green manure crop .................................................................................................... 2
Living mulch ............................................................................................................................ 3
Catch crop .............................................................................................................................. 3
Forage crop ............................................................................................................................ 3
Benefits of Cover Crops and Green Manures ............................................................................. 3
Organic matter and soil structure ............................................................................................ 3
Nitrogen production ................................................................................................................. 4
Soil microbial activity ............................................................................................................... 4
Nutrient enhancement ............................................................................................................. 5
Rooting action ......................................................................................................................... 6
Weed suppression .................................................................................................................. 6
Soil and water conservation .................................................................................................... 6
Vegetation management to create a cover crop mulch ............................................................ 6
Limitations of cover crops ........................................................................................................ 8
Cover crops in rotation ............................................................................................................ 9
Pest management benefits of cover crops ............................................................................... 9
Economics of cover crops ..................................................................................................... 10
References ................................................................................................................................ 11
Resources ................................................................................................................................ 12
Publications in Print .............................................................................................................. 13
Videos ................................................................................................................................... 14
Web Resources .................................................................................................................... 14
Additional Information from ATTRA ........................................................................................ 16
Principal Uses of Cover ter. Often a legume is chosen for the added ben-
efit of nitrogen fixation. In northern states, the
Table 4. Biomass yield and nutrient accruement by selected cover crops (10).
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Crop Biomass* Nitrogen Potassium Phosphorus Magnesium Calcium
lbs/ac lbs/ac lbs/ac lbs/ac lbs/ac lbs/ac
_________________________________________________________________________________
Hairy Vetch 3,260 141 133 18 18 52
_________________________________________________________________________________
Crimson clover 4,243 115 143 16 11 62
_________________________________________________________________________________
Austrian W. P. 4,114 144 159 19 13 45
_________________________________________________________________________________
Rye 5,608 89 108 17 8 22
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*Dry weight of aboveground plant material.
Certain broad-leaved plants are noted for nutrients from the subsoil and translocate them
their ability to accumulate minerals at high con- upwards to the surface rooting zone, where they
centrations in their tissue. For example, buck- become available to the following crop.
wheat, lupine, and sweetclover are noted for their The breakdown of green manures in soil in-
ability to extract P from soils. Likewise, alfalfa fluences mineral nutrient availability in another
and other deep-rooting green manures scavenge way. During decomposition of organic matter,
Figure 3. Transplanting tomatoes into mechanically killed hairy vetch. (From USDA Farmer’s
Bulletin No. 2279).
Planting cover crops known to readily win- west, several native and adapted legumes (such
ter-kill is another non-chemical means of vegeta- as black medic) seem to have potential for re-
tion management. Spring oats, buckwheat, and placing cultivation or herbicides in summer fal-
sorghum fill this need. They are fall-planted early low. There is always additional management re-
enough to accumulate some top growth before quired when cover crops of any sort are added
freezing temperatures kill them. In some loca- to a rotation. Turning green manures under or
tions, oats will not be completely killed and some suppressing cover crops requires additional time
plants will regrow in the spring. Winter-killed and expense, compared to having no cover crop
cover crops provide a dead mulch through the at all.
winter months instead of green cover. They are Insect communities associated with cover
used primarily in regions where precipitation is crops work to the farmer’s advantage in some
limited, such as West Texas, and in situations crops and create a disadvantage in others. For