Restoring The Soil

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The document provides an overview of cover crops and their uses, summarizing their effects on soil properties, nutrients, and conservation. It also addresses management considerations and provides resources for further information.

Cover crops can improve soil structure and organic matter, fix nitrogen, increase soil microbial activity, enhance nutrient levels, suppress weeds, and reduce erosion.

Winter cover crops, summer green manures, living mulches, catch crops, and some forage crops are mentioned. Specific crops include hairy vetch, rye, clovers, vetches, medics, field peas, oats, wheat, and warm-season crops.

OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS

AND GREEN MANURES

FUNDAMENTALS OF SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE

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

Crops and Green Manures


plant selected needs to possess enough cold tol-
erance to survive hard winters. Hairy vetch and
rye are among the few selections that meet this
“Green manuring” involves the soil incorpo- need.
ration of any field or forage crop while green or Many more winter cover crops are adapted
soon after flowering, for the purpose of soil im- to the southern U.S. These cool-season legumes
provement. A cover crop is any crop grown to include clovers, vetches, medics, and field peas.
provide soil cover, regardless of whether it is later They are sometimes planted in a mix with winter
incorporated. Cover crops are grown primarily cereal grains such as oats, rye, or wheat. Winter
to prevent soil erosion by wind and water. Cover cover crops can be established by aerial seeding
crops and green manures can be annual, bien- into maturing cash crops in the fall, as well as by
nial, or perennial herbaceous plants grown in a drilling or broadcasting seed immediately follow-
pure or mixed stand during all or part of the year. ing harvest.
In addition to providing ground cover and, in
the case of a legume, fixing nitrogen, they also Summer green manure crop
help suppress weeds and reduce insect pests and A summer green manure occupies the land
diseases. When cover crops are planted to re- for a portion of the summer growing season.
duce nutrient leaching following a main crop, they These warm-season cover crops can be used to
are often termed “catch crops.” fill a niche in crop rotations, to improve the con-
Winter cover crop ditions of poor soils, or to prepare land for a pe-
rennial crop. Legumes such as cowpeas, soy-
A winter cover crop is planted in late sum- beans, annual sweetclover, sesbania, guar,
mer or fall to provide soil cover during the win- crotalaria, or velvet beans may be grown as sum-

PAGE 2 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES


mer green manure crops to add nitrogen along efits, the forage should not be grazed or cut for
with organic matter. Non-legumes such as sor- hay during its last growth period, to allow time
ghum-sudangrass, millet, forage sorghum, or for biomass to accumulate prior to killing.
buckwheat are grown to provide biomass,
smother weeds, and improve soil tilth. Benefits of Cover Crops and
Living mulch
A living mulch is a cover crop that is inter-
Green Manures
planted with an annual or perennial cash crop.
Living mulches suppress weeds, reduce soil ero- Organic matter and soil structure
sion, enhance soil fertility, and improve water A major benefit obtained from green manures
infiltration. Examples of living mulches in an- is the addition of organic matter to the soil. Dur-
nual cropping systems include overseeding hairy ing the breakdown of organic matter by microor-
vetch into corn at the last cultivation, no-till plant- ganisms, compounds are formed that are resis-
ing of vegetables into subclover, sweetclover tant to decomposition—such as gums, waxes, and
drilled into small grains, and annual ryegrass resins. These compounds—and the mycelia,
broadcast into vegetables. Living mulches in pe- mucus, and slime produced by the microorgan-
rennial cropping systems are simply the grasses isms—help bind together soil particles as gran-
or legumes planted in the alleyways between ules, or aggregates. A well-aggregated soil tills
rows in orchards, vineyards, Christmas trees, easily, is well aerated, and has a high water infil-
berries, windbreaks, and field tration rate. In-
nursery trees to control erosion creased levels of
and provide traction. organic matter
Catch crop also influence soil
humus. Hu-
A catch crop is a cover crop mus—the sub-
established after harvesting the stance that re-
main crop and is used prima- sults as the end
rily to reduce nutrient leaching product of the
from the soil profile. For ex- decay of plant
ample, planting cereal rye fol- and animal mate-
lowing corn harvest helps to rials in the soil—
scavenge residual nitrogen, provides a wide
thus reducing the possibility of range of benefits
groundwater contamination. In to crop produc-
this instance, the rye catch crop tion.
also functions as a winter cover Sod-forming
crop. Short-term cover crops grass or grass-le-
that fill a niche within a crop gume mixtures
rotation are also commonly are important in
known as catch crops. crop rotations be-
cause they help
Forage crop replenish organic
Short-rotation forage crops function both as matter lost during annual cultivation. However,
cover crops when they occupy land for pastur- several years of sod production are sometimes
age or haying, and as green manures when they required before measurable changes in humus
are eventually incorporated or killed for a no-till levels occur. In comparison, annual green ma-
mulch. Examples include legume sods of alfalfa, nures have a negligible effect on humus levels,
sweet clover, trefoil, red clover, and white clo- because tillage and cultivation are conducted each
ver, as well as grass-legume sods like fescue-clo- year. They do replenish the supply of active,
ver pastures. For maximum soil-improving ben- rapidly decomposing organic matter (1).

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 3


Hoyt, an agronomist at North Carolina State Uni-
versity, has estimated that 40% of plant tissue
The contribution of organic matter to the soil
nitrogen becomes available the first year follow-
from a green manure crop is comparable to
ing a cover crop that is chemically killed and used
the addition of 9 to 13 tons per acre of farm-
as a no-till mulch. He estimates that 60% of the
yard manure or 1.8 to 2.2 tons dry matter per
tissue N is released when the cover crop is incor-
acre (2).
porated as a green manure rather than left on the
surface as a mulch. Lesser amounts are avail-
Table 1 shows dry matter production of sev- able for the second or third crop following a le-
eral winter-annual legume cover crops grown in gume, but increased yields are apparent for two
the southern U.S. Approximately 2.2 tons per to three growing seasons (5).
acre per year of crop residue is considered ad- To determine how much nitrogen is contained
equate to maintain soil organic matter at constant in a cover crop, an estimate is needed of the yield
levels in continuously cropped soils (3). This fig- of above-ground herbage and its percentage of
ure will vary according to climate, region, and nitrogen. A procedure to make this determina-
cropping system. tion is available in the Northeast Cover Crop Hand-
book, in Farmer’s Fertilizer Handbook, and in Man-
Table 1. Average biomass yields aging Cover Crops Profitably. A description of these
publications complete with ordering information
and nitrogen yields of several
can be found in the Resources section below.
legumes (4).
________________________________________ The procedure involves taking a field sample,
Cover Crop Biomass Nitrogen
________________________________________ drying it, weighing it, and sending a sample off
Tons/acre Lbs./acre
________________________________________ for forage analysis, which includes an estimate
Sweet clover 1.75 120
________________________________________ of protein content. Once the protein content is
Berseem clover 1.1 70
________________________________________ known, simply divide it by 6.25 to obtain the per-
Crimson clover 1.4 100
________________________________________ centage of nitrogen contained in the cover crop
Hairy vetch 1.75 110
________________________________________ tissue. Finally, to obtain pounds of legume ni-
trogen per acre, multiply the nitrogen figure by
the pounds-of-biomass figure.
Nitrogen production Forage legumes are valuable in rotations be-
cause they generate income from grazing or
Nitrogen production from legumes is a key
haying and still contribute nitrogen from regrowth
benefit of growing cover crops and green ma-
and root residues. A high percentage of biologi-
nures. Nitrogen accumulations by leguminous
cally fixed nitrogen is in the top growth (Table
cover crops range from 40 to 200 lbs. of nitrogen
2).
per acre. The amount of nitrogen available from
legumes depends on the species of legume grown,
the total biomass produced, and the percentage Table 2. Percent nitrogen in
of nitrogen in the plant tissue. Cultural and en- legume tops and roots (6).
vironmental conditions that limit legume ________________________________________
Crop Tops Roots
________________________________________
growth—such as a delayed planting date, poor
%N %N
________________________________________
stand establishment, and drought—will reduce
Soybeans 93 7
________________________________________
the amount of nitrogen produced. Conditions
Vetch 89 11
________________________________________
that encourage good nitrogen production include
Cowpeas 84 16
________________________________________
getting a good stand, optimum soil nutrient lev-
Red clover 68 32
________________________________________
els and soil pH, good nodulation, and adequate
Alfalfa 58 42
________________________________________
soil moisture.
The portion of green-manure nitrogen avail-
able to a following crop is usually about 40% to
60% of the total amount contained in the legume. Soil microbial activity
For example, a hairy vetch crop that accumulated A rapid increase in soil microorganisms oc-
180 lbs. N per acre prior to plowing down will curs after a young, relatively lush green manure
contribute approximately 90 lbs. N per acre to crop is incorporated into the soil. The soil mi-
the succeeding grain or vegetable crop. Dr. Greg crobes multiply to attack the freshly incorporated

PAGE 4 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES


plant material. During microbial breakdown, types of crop residues. The important point is
nutrients held within the plant tissues are re- that lush green manures are richer in nitrogen
leased and made available to the following crop. relative to carbon, especially in comparison to
Factors that influence the ability of microor- highly lignified crop residues like corn stalks. It
ganisms to break down organic matter include will take a lot longer for soil microbes to break
soil temperature, soil moisture, and carbon to down corn stalks than fresh hairy vetch.
nitrogen (C:N) ratio of the plant material. The
C:N ratio of plant tissue reflects the kind and age
of the plants from which it was derived (Table
Table 3. Common C:N ratios of
3). As plants mature, fibrous (carbon) plant ma- cover crops.
________________________________________
terial increases and protein (nitrogen) content de- Organic Material C:N Ratio Reference
________________________________________
creases (7). The optimum C:N ratio for rapid Young rye plants 14:1 4
________________________________________
decomposition of organic matter is between 15:1 Rye at flowering 20:1 4
________________________________________
and 25:1 (6). Hairy vetch 10:1 to 15:1 8
________________________________________
C:N ratios above 25:1 can result in nitrogen Crimson clover 15:1 6
________________________________________
being “tied up” by soil microbes in the break- Corn stalks 60:1 4
________________________________________
down of carbon-rich crop residues, thus pulling Sawdust 250:1 9
________________________________________
nitrogen away from crop plants. Adding some
nitrogen fertilizer to aid the decomposition pro-
cess may be advisable with these high carbon resi-
dues. The lower the C:N ratio, the more N will Nutrient enhancement
be released into the soil for immediate crop use. In addition to nitrogen from legumes, cover
The C:N ratio is more a function of the plant’s crops help recycle other nutrients on the farm.
N content than its carbon content. Most plant Nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P), potassium (K),
materials contain close to 40% carbon. To deter- calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), sulfur (S), and
mine the C:N ratio of any plant material, divide other nutrients are accumulated by cover crops
40% by its nitrogen content. For example let’s during a growing season. When the green ma-
say hairy vetch contains 4.2% nitrogen: 40/4.2= a nure is incorporated, or laid down as no-till
C:N ratio of 9.5. A procedure for determining mulch, these plant-essential nutrients become
the nitrogen content of cover crop biomass was slowly available during decomposition. Dr. Greg
previously addressed in the section on nitrogen Hoyt developed a method for estimating nutri-
production. Estimating the nitrogen contribution ent accruement by cover crops in order to re-
of a cover crop is very helpful when adjusting N- duce the soil test recommendation of fertilizer
fertilizer rates to account for legume nitrogen. for the following crop (10). Table 4 shows the
Table 3 provides a nice comparison of the biomass and nutrients accumulated by several
typical C:N ratios that can be found in different cover crops he worked with.

Table 4. Biomass yield and nutrient accruement by selected cover crops (10).
_________________________________________________________________________________
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
_________________________________________________________________________________
*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,

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 5


carbonic and other organic acids are formed as a sudangrass. The mulch that results from mow-
byproduct of microbial activity. These organic ing or chemically killing allelopathic cover crops
acids react with insoluble mineral rocks and phos- can provide significant weed control in no-till
phate precipitates, releasing phosphates and ex- cropping systems. Living mulches suppress
changeable nutrients (6). weeds during the growing season by competing
with them for light, moisture, and nutrients.
Rooting action
The extensive root systems of some cover
Soil and water conservation
crops are highly effective in loosening and aerat- When cover crops are planted solely for soil
ing the soil. In Australian wheat experiments, conservation, they should provide a high percent-
the taproots of a blue lupine cover crop per- age of ground coverage as quickly as possible.
formed like a “biological plow” in penetrating Most grassy and non-legume cover crops, like
compacted soils (11). When cover crops are buckwheat and rye, fulfill this need well. Of the
planted after a subsoiling treatment, they help winter legumes, hairy vetch provides the least
extend the soil-loosening effects of the deep till- autumn ground cover because it puts on most of
age treatment. The rooting depths of several its above-ground growth in the spring. Conse-
green manures grown under average conditions quently, it offers little ground cover during the
are listed in Table 5. erosion-prone fall and winter period. Sowing a
mix of leguminous and grassy-type cover crops
Table 5. Typical rooting depths of will increase the ground coverage, as well as pro-
vide some nitrogen to the following crop.
several green manure crops (2).
________________________________________ The soil conservation benefits provided by a
Depth (feet) Green Manure Crop
________________________________________ cover crop extend beyond protection of bare soil
5 to 7 Red Clover, Lupine, Radish,
________________________________________ during non-crop periods. The mulch that results
Turnips
________________________________________ from a chemically or mechanically killed cover
3 to 5 Common Vetch, Mustard,
________________________________________ crop in no-till plantings increases water infiltra-
Black Medic, Rape
________________________________________ tion and reduces water evaporation from the soil
1 to 3 White Clover, Hairy Vetch
________________________________________ surface. Soil cover reduces soil crusting and sub-
sequent surface water runoff during rainy peri-
Weed suppression ods.
Retention of soil moisture under cover crop
Weeds flourish on bare soil. Cover crops take
mulches can be a significant advantage. Dr.
up space and light, thereby shading the soil and
Blevins and other researchers showed consis-
reducing the opportunity for weeds to establish
tently higher soil-moisture levels for corn grown
themselves. The soil-loosening effect of deep-
in a herbicide-killed, no-till bluegrass sod than
rooting green manures also reduces weed popu-
for corn grown in conventionally plowed and
lations that thrive in compacted soils.
disked plots (12). They concluded that the de-
The primary purpose of a non-legume green
creased evaporation and increased moisture stor-
manure—such as rye, millet, or sudangrass—is
age under the no-till mulch allowed plots to sur-
to provide weed control, add organic matter, and
vive a short-term drought without severe mois-
improve soil tilth. They do not produce nitro-
ture stress.
gen. Thus, whenever possible, annual grain or
vegetable crops should follow a legume green Vegetation management to create a cover
manure to derive the benefit of farm-produced
nitrogen. crop mulch
Providing weed suppression through the use Herbicides are the most commonly used tools
of allelopathic cover crops and living mulches has for cover crop suppression in conservation till-
become an important method of weed control in age systems. Non-chemical methods include pro-
sustainable agriculture. Allelopathic plants are pane flamers, mowing and mechanical tillage.
those that inhibit or slow the growth of other Mowing a rye cover crop when it heads out
nearby plants by releasing natural toxins, or in late spring provides sufficient kill (13). The
“allelochemicals.” Cover crop plants that exhibit rye must be in the pollination phase, or later, to
allelopathy include the small grains like rye and be successfully killed. When the anthers are fully
summer annual forages related to sorghum and extended and you can thump the stalk and pol-
PAGE 6 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES
len falls down, it is time to mow. If mowed ear- ers can be adjusted for light or aggressive action
lier, it just grows back. Flail mowers generally and set for continuous coverage. Steve says the
produce more uniformly distributed mulch than machine can be run up to 8 miles an hour and
do rotary cutters, which tend to windrow the does a good job of killing the cover crop and push-
mulch to one side of the mower. Sickle bar mow- ing it right down on the soil. It can also be used
ers create fairly uniform mulch, but the to flatten down other crop residues after harvest.
unchopped rye stalks can be more difficult to Groff improved his chopper by adding indepen-
plant into. If late spring weather continues cool dent linkages and springs to each roller. This
and wet, more rye regrowth will occur than if modification makes each unit more flexible to al-
the weather remains warm and dryer. Typically, low continuous use over uneven terrain. Fol-
if rye is mowed at the pollination stage, regrowth lowing his chopper, Groff transplants vegetable
is minimal and not a problem to crops grown in seedlings into the killed mulch. He direct-seeds
the mowed mulch. sweet corn and snap beans into the mulch. For
In a Mississippi study, flail mowing, or roll- more information on this system, order Steve’s
ing with rolling disk colters spaced at 4 inches, videos listed under the Videos section of this pub-
was usually as effective as herbicides in killing lication, or visit his Web page, which is listed
hairy vetch, crimson clover and subterranean clo- under the Web Resources section. At the Web
ver (14). Timing is a key factor when using mow- site you can see photos of these machines in ac-
ing or rolling to control cover crops. Mechanical tion, and test-plot results comparing flail mow-
control was most effective when the legumes ing, rolling, and herbicide-killed cover crops.
were in the seed formation growth
phase (mid to late April) or when
stem lengths along the ground ex-
ceeded 10 inches (14). If mowing was
followed with a pre-plant herbicide
application of Atrazine, the legume
kill was even more effective.
Researchers at Ohio State Uni-
versity developed a mechanical
cover crop killing tool used to take
out a cover crop without herbicides.
They call it an undercutter because
it uses wide V-blades which run just
under the soil surface to cut off the
cover crop from its roots. The blades
are pitched to 15 degrees allowing photo reprinted by permission of Steve Groff
the blades to penetrate the soil and
Figure 1. Steve Groff’s modified rolling stalk chopper. (From
provide a slight lifting action.
www.cedarmeadowfarm.com)
Mounted on the same toolbar behind
the cutter blades is a rolling basket
to flatten and distribute the undercut cover crop. Two USDA-ARS researchers, Drs. Aref
The undercutter was tried on several cover crops Abdule-Bake and John Teasdale of the Beltsville
and effectively killed crimson clover, hairy vetch, Maryland Research Center, have developed a
rye, and barley. These undercutters could be cover-crop roller (Figure 2) that acts, in principle,
made from locally available stock by innovative similarly to Steve Groff’s rolling chopper. In their
tinkerers. extensive research trials using hairy vetch, they
Steve Groff of Cedar Meadow Farm in no-till planted tomatoes into a mechanically killed
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, uses a 10-foot hairy vetch cover crop (Figure 3). Details of their
Buffalo rolling stalk chopper from Fleischer research—and other useful information on flail-
Manufacturing (15) to transform a green cover mowing of cover crops and direct no-till seeding
crop into a no-till mulch (see Figure 1). Under of sweet corn and snap beans into mechanically
the hitch-mounted frame, the stalk chopper has killed cover crops—can be seen in the USDA
two sets of rollers running in tandem. These roll- Farmer’s Bulletin No. 2279, listed under the Web

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 7


Resources section below. As of this writing the where farmers want to plant early in the spring
bulletin is available only on-line because the first and avoid overwintered cover crops altogether.
printing of it was all distributed to farmers and
their advisors in a very short time. Limitations of cover crops
The recognized benefits of green
manuring and cover cropping—soil
cover, improved soil structure, ni-
trogen from legumes—need to be
evaluated in terms of cash returns
to the farm as well as the long-term
value of sustained soil health. For
the immediate growing season, seed
and establishment costs need to be
weighed against reduced nitrogen
fertilizer requirements and the effect
on cash crop yields.
Water consumption by green
manure crops is a concern and is
pronounced in areas with less than
30 inches of precipitation per year.
Still, even in the fallow regions of
Figure 2. A homemade roller to kill cover crops (From USDA Farmer’s
Bulletin No. 2279). the Great Plains and Pacific North-

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

PAGE 8 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES


example, certain living mulches enhance the bio- stable systems, serious pest outbreaks are rare,
logical control of insect pests of summer vegetable because natural controls exist to automatically
crops and pecan orchards by providing favorable bring populations back into balance.
habitats for beneficial insects. On the negative Farmers and researchers in several locations
side, winter legumes that harbor catfacing insects have observed and documented increased ben-
such as the tarnished plant bug, stink bug, and eficial insect numbers associated with cover crops.
plum curculio can pose problems for apple or The cover crops provide pollen, nectar, and a
peach orchardists in the eastern U.S. Nematodes physical location for beneficial insects to live while
encouraged by certain legumes on sandy soils they search for pest insects. Conservation tillage
are another concern of farmers, as are cutworms proves a better option than tilling because it leaves
in rotations following grain or grass crops. more crop residue on the surface to harbor the
beneficial insects. Strip tilling or no-tillage dis-
Cover crops in rotation turbs a minimum of the existing cover crop that
Cover crops can fit well into many different harbors beneficial insects. Cover crops left on
cropping systems during periods of the year when the surface may be living or in the process of
no cash crop is being grown. Even the simplest dying. At either of these stages they protect
corn/soybean rotation can accommodate a rye beneficials. Once the main crop is growing, the
cover crop following corn, which will scavenge beneficials move onto it. By having the cover
residual nitrogen and provide ground cover in crop in place early in the growing season, the
the fall and winter. When spring-killed as a no- population of beneficials is much higher sooner
till mulch, the rye provides a water-conserving in the growing season than would be the case if
mulch and suppresses early-season weeds for the only the main crop were serving as habitat for
following soybean crop. Hairy vetch can be the beneficials.
planted behind soybeans to provide nitrogen for Innovative farmers are paving the way by in-
corn the following spring. Hairy vetch is not a terplanting cover crops with the main crop and
good cover crop to use when small grains are realizing pest management benefits as a result.
included in the rotation—if the vetch ever goes Georgia cotton farmers Wayne Parramore and
to seed it can become a terrible weed in the small sons reduced their insecticide and fertilizer use
grain crop. In these cases, crimson clover, sweet by growing a lupine cover crop ahead of their
clover, or red clover should be used, depending spring-planted cotton (16). They started experi-
on location. menting with lupines on 100 acres in 1993 and by
Many vegetable rotations can accommodate 1995 were growing 1,100 acres of lupines.
cover crops as well. Buckwheat can follow let- Ground preparation for cotton planting is begun
tuce and still be tilled down in time for fall broc- about 10 days prior to planting by tilling 14-inch
coli. Hairy vetch works well with tomatoes and wide strips into the lupines. Herbicides are ap-
other warm-season vegetables. The vetch can be plied to the strips at that time and row middles
killed by flail mowing and tomato sets planted remain untouched. The remaining lupines pro-
into the mulch. For more details on the vetch- vide beneficial insect habitat and also serve as a
tomato system see Steve Groff’s Web page, listed smother crop to curtail weeds and grasses. The
under Web Resources below. Managing Cover lupines in the row middles can be tilled in later
Crops Profitably has a nice section on crop rota- in the season to release more legume nitrogen.
tion with cover crops, starting on page 34. For Dr. Sharad Phatak of the University of Geor-
ordering information on this handbook, see the gia has been working with cotton growers in
Publications in Print section below. Georgia testing a strip cropping method using
Pest management benefits of cover crops winter annual cover crops (17). Planting cotton
into strip-killed crimson clover improves soil
In addition to the soil improving benefits, health, cuts tillage costs, and allows him to grow
cover crops can also enhance many pest man- cotton without any insecticides and only 30
agement programs. Ecologists tell us that stable pounds of nitrogen fertilizer. Working with
natural systems are typically diverse, containing Phatak, farmer Benny Johnson reportedly saved
many different types of plants, arthropods, mam- at least $120/acre on his 16-acre test plot with
mals, birds, and microorganisms. Growing cover the clover system. There were no insect prob-
crops adds diversity to a cropping system. In lems in the test plot, while beet armyworms and

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 9


whiteflies infested nearby cotton and
required 8 to 12 sprays to control. Table 6. Optimum nitrogen rates and
profitability of several cover crops (19).
Cotton intercropped with crimson clo- _________________________________________________
Cover Crop Corn Yield Optimum N rate
ver yielded more than 3 bales per acre _________________________________________________
bu./acre
compared with 1.2 bales per acre in _________________________________________________ lbs N/acre
No cover crop 142
the rest of the field (17). Boll counts _________________________________________________ 100
Winter wheat 142
were 30 per plant with crimson clover _________________________________________________ 126
and 11 without it. Phatak identified Hairy vetch 148
_________________________________________________ 79
Austrian winter peas 153
up to 15 different kinds of beneficial _________________________________________________ 107
insects in these strip-planted plots. Crimson clover 148
_________________________________________________ 94
Phatak finds that planting crimson
clover seed at 15 pounds per acre in
the fall produces around 60 pounds of nitrogen Economics of cover crops
per acre by spring. By late spring, beneficial in- The most obvious direct economic benefit
sects are active in the clover. At that time, 6- to derived from legume cover crops is nitrogen fer-
12-inch planting strips of clover are killed with tilizer savings. In most cases these savings can
Roundup herbicide. Fifteen to 20 days later the offset cover crop establishment costs. Indirect
strips are lightly tilled and cotton is planted. The benefits include herbicide reduction in the case
clover in the row-middles is left growing to main- of an allelopathic rye cover crop, reduction in in-
tain beneficial insect habitat. When the clover is sect and nematode control costs in some cases,
past the bloom stage and less desirable as a pre- protection of ground water by scavenging re-
ferred habitat, beneficials move onto the cotton. sidual nitrate, and water conservation derived
Even early-season thrips, which can be a prob- from a no-till mulch. Longer-term benefits are
lem following cover crops, are limited or pre- derived from the buildup of organic matter re-
vented by beneficial insects in this system. Move- sulting in increased soil health. Healthy soils cycle
ment of the beneficials coincides with a period nutrients better, don’t erode, quickly absorb wa-
when cotton is most vulnerable to insect pests. ter after each rain, and produce healthy crops
Following cotton defoliation in the early fall, the and bountiful yields.
beneficials hibernate in adjacent non-crop areas. With annual cover crops, the highest cost is
Phatak points out that switching to a whole- seed. Hairy vetch and crimson clover typically
farm focus while reducing off-farm inputs is not range from 50¢ to $1.50 per pound. With a 20-
simple. It requires planning, management, and pound per acre seeding rate, seed costs range
several years to implement on a large scale. It is from $10 to $30 per acre. With a 25-pound seed-
likewise important to increase and maintain or- ing rate at 85¢/lb and a $6.50 no-till drilling cost,
ganic matter, which stimulates beneficial soil mi- it would cost $28 to plant an acre of this cover
croorganisms. Eventually a “living soil” will help crop.
keep harmful nematodes and soil-borne fungi In a Maryland study, hairy vetch was com-
under control (17). pared to a winter wheat cover crop or no cover
The two Creative Cover Cropping videos from crop at two different locations (coastal plain and
California, listed under the Videos section be- piedmont) (18). Corn was grown following the
low, show footage of cover crop systems used to cover crops. Nitrogen fertilizer was used with
provide beneficial insect habitat and how to man- the cover crops at varying rates. The most prof-
age them. Managing Cover Crops Profitably has a itable cover crop and nitrogen fertilizer combina-
section on using cover crops for pest manage- tion used more than 100 lbs of additional nitro-
ment starting on page 25. See the Publications gen per acre plus the cover crop. At $2.50 per
in Print section for ordering information. Addi- bushel corn price, highest returns at the coastal
tional concepts and practices associated with plain location were realized with 120 lbs of addi-
cover crops as a tool to build soil health and in- tional nitrogen per acre. Profits were as follows:
crease agroecosystem diversity in relation to pest $53.75 per acre from no cover crop, $95.62 from
management are contained in the following hairy vetch, and $32.47 from winter wheat cover
ATTRA publications: Farmscaping to Enhance Bio- crop. All corn crops needed additional nitrogen.
logical Control and Alternative Nematode Control. Lower N rates were less profitable. At the pied-

PAGE 10 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES


mont location, also with $2.50 corn, winter fal- yield increases beyond the nitrogen benefit oc-
low was most profitable at $68.03 with 40 lbs per cur, they are due to improved soil water use effi-
acre additional N, hairy vetch was profitable at ciency and other soil health benefits from the cover
$56.57 with 40 lbs per acre, and winter wheat crop.
was profitable at $30.12 with 100 lbs of additional
nitrogen.
In another Maryland study (19), optimum ni-
References
trogen rates for corn were determined when corn 1) Allison, F.E. 1973. Soil Organic Matter
followed four cover crops, compared to a winter and Its Role in Crop Production. Elsevier
fallow (no cover crop) treatment. Corn was grown Scientific Pub. Co. Amsterdam. 637 p.
following each cover crop treatment at various
2) Schmid, O., and R. Klay. 1984. Green
nitrogen rates over a three-year period. The re-
Manuring: Principles and Practice. Woods
sults are shown in Table 6. The optimum nitro-
End Agricultural Institute, Mt. Vernon,
gen rate is the rate above which no additional
Maine. Translated by W. F. Brinton, Jr.,
yield increases are realized. The researchers con-
from a publication of the Research Insti-
cluded that cover crops can benefit a succeeding
tute for Biological Husbandry. Switzer-
corn crop not only by supplying nitrogen but also
land. 50 p.
by increasing maximum yield of the system (19).
Many studies have shown that legume cover 3) Rasmussen, R.R. et al. 1980. Crop resi-
crops can replace a portion of the fertilizer nitro- due influences on soil carbon and nitrogen
gen requirements for a following crop. Some of in a wheat-fallow system. Soil Science
these replacement values can be seen in Table 7. Society of America Proceedings. Volume
The economic value of these nitrogen replace- 44. p. 596-600.
ments can be calculated by using a local nitrogen 4) Sarrantonio, Marianne. 1994. Northeast
price. These costs can then be compared to cover Cover Crop Handbook. Rodale Institute,
crop seed and planting costs. These simple ni- Emmaus, Pennsylvania. 118 p.
trogen cost comparisons do not take into account
the benefits of improved soil tilth and increased 5) Piper, C.V., and A.J. Pieters. 1922. Green
water infiltration resulting from cover crops. Manuring. USDA Farmer’s Bulletin 1250.
In a Kentucky study (25), economic returns 45 p.
above direct expenses for no-till corn were $64 6) McLeod, E. 1982. Feed the Soil. Organic
greater with hairy vetch plus 90 lbs of nitrogen Agriculture Research Institute, Graton,
fertilizer per acre than with no cover crop plus California. 209 p.
the same nitrogen rate. This advantage was
mostly due to the yield increase under the le- 7) May, J.T. 1981. Organic matter in nursery
gume cover crop of 36 bushels per acre. Some soils. p. 52-59. In: Proceedings of the 1981
researchers have stated that advantages of legume Southern Nursery Conference.
cover crops can only be realized if they increase 8) Sullivan, P.G. 1990. Rye and Vetch
yields of a following crop over yields obtained Intercrops for Reducing Corn N Fertilizer
from no cover Requirements
crop. In other and Providing
words, the ni- Table 7. Nitrogen fertilizer replacement value of Ground Cover
trogen replace- legume cover crops. in the Mid-
____________________________________________________
ment value is N replacement Atlantic Region.
insufficient to Cover Crop value (lbs/acre) Reference Ph.D. disserta-
____________________________________________________
offset the estab- Hairy vetch 80-89 Ebelhar, et al., 1984 (20) tion, Virginia
____________________________________________________
lishment costs Hairy vetch 170 Utomo, et al., 1990 (21) Polytechnic
____________________________________________________
of the cover Winter legumes 64-69 Hargrove, et al.,1986 (22) Institute and
____________________________________________________
crop without Hairy vetch 110 McVay, et al., 1989 (23) State Univer-
____________________________________________________
an increase in Crimson clover 88 McVay, et al., 1989 (23) sity,
____________________________________________________
crop yield. Winter legumes 75 Tyler, et al., 1987 (24) Blacksburg,
____________________________________________________________
When these Virginia. 149 p.

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 11


9) Davidson, H., R. Meclenburg, and C. 19) Decker, A.M., A.J. Clark, J.J. Meisinger, F.
Peterson. 1988. Nursery Management: Ronald, and M.S. McIntosh. 1994. Le-
Administration and Culture. 2nd ed. gume cover crop contributions to no-
Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New tillage corn production. Agronomy Jour-
Jersey. p. 220. nal. Volume 86. p. 126-135.
10) Hoyt, G.D. 1987. Legumes as a green 20) Ebelhar, S.A., W.W. Frye, and R.L.
manure in conservation tillage. p. 96-98. Blevins. 1984. Nitrogen from legume
In: J.F. Powers (ed.) The Role of Legumes cover crops for no-tillage. Agronomy
in Conservation Tillage Systems. Soil Journal. Volume 76. p. 51-55.
Conservation Society of America, Ankeny,
21) Utomo, M., W.W. Frye, and R.L. Blevins.
Iowa.
1990. Sustainaing soil nitrogen for corn
11) Henderson, C.W.L. 1989. Lupine as a using a hairy vetch cover crop. Agronomy
biological plough: Evidence for and effects Journal. Volume 82. p. 979-983.
on wheat growth and yield. Australian
22) Hargrove, W.L. 1986. Winter legumes as
Journal of Experimental Agriculture.
a nitrogen source for no-till grain sor-
Volume 29. p. 99-102.
ghum. Agronomy Journal. Volume 78. p.
12) Blevins, R.C., D. Cook, and S.H. Phillips. 70-74.
1971. Influence of no-tillage on soil mois-
23) McVay, K.A., D.E. Radcliffe, and W.L.
ture. Agronomy Journal. Volume 63. p.
Hargrove. 1989. Winter legume effects on
593-596.
soil properties and nitrogen fertilizer
13) Sullivan, Preston. 1989. Alternative kill requirements. Soil Science Society of
methods for a rye cover crop. Unpub- America Journal. Volume 53. p. 1856-
lished data. 1862.
14) Dabney, S., N.W. Buehring, and D.B. 24) Tyler, D.D., B.N. Duck, J.G. Graveil, and
Reginelli. 1991. Mechanical control of J.F. Bowen. 1987. Estimating response
legume cover crops. p. 6. In: W.L. curves of legume nitrogen contributions to
Hargrove (ed.). Cover Crops for Clean no-tillage corn. p. 50. In: J.F. Powers
Water. Soil Conservation Society of (ed.). The Role of Legumes in Conserva-
America, Ankeny, Iowa. tion Tillage Systems. Soil Conservation
Society of America, Ankeny, Iowa.
15) Henke Machine—Buffalo Equipment
2281 16th Avenue 25) Frye, W.W., and R.L. Blevins. 1989.
P.O. Box 848 Economically sustainable crop production
Columbus, NE 68602-0848 with legume cover crops and conservation
800-228-1405 tillage. Journal of Soil and Water Conser-
402-564-3244 vation. Volume 44, Number 1. p. 57-60.
16) Dirnerger, J.M. 1995. The bottom line
matters-you can laugh at him on the way
to the bank. National Conservation Tillage
Resources
Digest. October-November. p. 20-23. In most states the Extension service and Ag-
17) Yancey, Cecil Jr. 1994. Covers challenge ricultural Experiment Stations offer free or low-
cotton chemicals. The New Farm. Febru- cost publications on cover crops to state residents.
ary. p. 20-23. Examples include: Effects of Winter Cover Crops
on Yield of Cotton and Soil Properties (Arkansas
18) Hanson, J.C., E. Lichtenberg, A.M. Decker, Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 924),
and A.J. Clark. 1993. Profitability of no- Planting Guide for Forage Crops (North Carolina
tillage corn following a hairy vetch cover Extension Service publication AG-226), and Cover
crop. Journal of Production Agriculture. Crops (Mississippi Cooperative Extension Service
Volume 6, Number 3. p. 432-437. Publication 1552). Contact these local sources to
obtain information adapted to your immediate
area.

PAGE 12 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES


Publications in Print Green Manuring: Principles and Practice of Natu-
ral Soil Improvement. 1989. 51 pages. This publi-
Managing Cover Crops Profitably, 2nd Edition. cation contains an excellent review of the ben-
1998. The Sustainable Agriculture Network. This efits and uses of green manure cover crops. This
publication is one of the most comprehensive 51-page spiral-bound book is largely based on
hands-on resources available. The book is orga- green manuring trials in Switzerland and is
nized by the different geographic regions of the supplemented with cover crop data compiled by
United States. Covered in the book are selection Woods End Agricultural Institute of Maine and
of the best species for your location, planning The New Alchemy Institute of Massachusetts.
profitable crop rotations, crop yield benefits fol- Although much of the discussion is based on the
lowing cover crops, and fertilizer reduction real- use of green manures in Switzerland, the cultural
ized from cover crops. Chapters on 18 different practices are just as applicable to farming sys-
cover crop species and charts rating many fac- tems in the United States. Tables include seed-
tors for each species, including drought tolerance, ing rates and cost of seed per acre, biomass yields
nitrogen yield, and seeding rates. The top six and nutrient contents, and characteristics of se-
high-performing cover crops for each region are lected living mulches. The 1989 edition, unlike
discussed. This publication may be ordered for the earlier editions, also contains an extensive list
$19.00 plus $3.95 shipping from: of seed sources in the U.S. It is available for $20,
Sustainable Agriculture Publications which includes shipping and handling, from:
210 Hills Building Woods End Agricultural Institute
University of Vermont PO Box 297
Burlington, VT 05405-0082 Mt. Vernon, ME 04352
802-656-0471 207-293-2457
Excerpts from the 2nd Edition can also be http://www.woodsend.org
found on the SAN Web site: http:// Covercrops for California Agriculture by P.R.
www.sare.org/mccp2/ Miller, W.L. Graves, W.A. Williams, and B.A.
Northeast Cover Crop Handbook. 1994. 118 Madison is California Extension Leaflet No. 21471,
pages. Marianne Sarrantonio. Among the topics published in December of 1989. This 24-page
covered in this comprehensive and practical leaflet contains information on using cover crops
manual on using cover crops are how to choose for soil improvement, selecting cover crops,
the right cover crop for your operation, building growing and working in cover crops, biological
a rotation around cover crops, choosing the best interactions, and an appendix on cover crop man-
species for the whole farm, estimating the nitro- agement systems. It can be obtained for $3.50
gen contribution from a green manure, looking plus $2.00 shipping and handling from:
at soil improvements from cover crops, and low- University of California, ANR
ering the cost of cover cropping. The book is Comunication Services
well written and easy to read, with lots of draw- 6701 San Pablo Avenue
ings and simple charts. The appendix contains Oakland, CA 94608-1239
detailed management practices for 20 cover crop 510-642-2431
species, cover crop seed sources, and other in- http://anrcatalog.ucdavis.edu
formation sources. To order this publication send
Cover Cropping in Vineyards by Chuck Ingles,
$12.00 plus $5.50 shipping and handling to:
University of California Publication number 3338.
Rodale Institute Bookstore Published in 1998 with 168 pages. The publica-
611 Siegfriedale Road tion offers cover cropping methods for enhanc-
Kutztown, PA 19530 ing vineyard performance. Provides detailed in-
800-832-6285 formation on how cover crops promote ecologi-
610-683-6009 cal stability. Useful to vineyard owners, manag-
http://www.rodaleinstitute.org ers, consultants, and pest control advisors. Avail-

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 13


able for $20 plus $5 shipping and handling from: straints of cover crop use. The film shows many
University of California, ANR types of cover crops used in various annual crop-
Comunication Services ping systems for soil fertility and pest manage-
6701 San Pablo Avenue ment. 24 minutes. Item number V93-V.
Oakland, CA 94608-1239 Creative Cover Cropping in Perennial Farming
510-642-2431 Systems. 1993. Produced by the University of
http://anrcatalog.ucdavis.edu California. Teaches how cover crops can be used
to protect and improve soil fertility, enhance pest
control, and provide other benefits. Creative
Cover Crops: Resources for Education and Exten- management options are shown with a wide va-
sion. 1998. 3-ring binder. To order, send $20.00 riety of cover crops used in orchards and vine-
postpaid, U.S. check or money order (payable to yards. 27 minutes. Item number V93-W.
“UC Regents”; write title of publication on the To order either or both of these videos send
check) to: $15.00 plus $4.00 shipping and handling each to:
UC SAREP University of California
University of California ANR Communication Services
One Shields Ave. 6701 San Pablo Avenue
Davis, CA 95616-8716 Oakland, CA 94608-1239
530-752-7556 510-642-2431
530-754-8550 FAX http://anrcatalog.ucdavis.edu
[email protected]
http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu
Web Resources
Videos USDA’s Sustainable Agriculture Network (SAN)
No-till Vegetables by Steve Groff. 1997. Steve http://www.sare.org/
is a 15-year no-till farmer in Lancaster County,
This site offers the first edition of Managing
Pennsylvania, who uses cover crops extensively
Cover Crops Profitably on-line and a database of
in his crop fields. Steve farms 175 acres of veg-
other sustainable agriculture research and
etables, alfalfa, and grain crops on his Cedar
education projects. Many of these projects have
Meadow Farm. This video leads you through
a cover crop component and some are focused on
selection of the proper cover crop mix to plant
cover crops.
into and how to control cover crops with little or
no herbicide. You will see Groff’s mechanical Managing Cover Crops Profitably
cover-crop-kill method, which creates ideal no- http://www.sare.org/handbook/mccp2/
till mulch without herbicides. Vegetables are index.htm
planted right into this mulch using a no-till trans-
The on-line version of the first edition mentioned
planter. He grows high-quality tomatoes, pump-
in the paper publication listed above. It summa-
kins, broccoli, snap beans, and sweet corn. After
rizes more than 30 cover crops by region.
several years of no-till production his soils are
Published in 1991.
very mellow and easy to plant into. You’ll also
hear comments from leading researchers in the UC SAREP Cover Crop Resource Page
no-till vegetable area. Order this video for $21.95 http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/ccrop
plus $3.00 shipping from: This is the database of all databases when it
Cedar Meadow Farm comes to cover crops. The UC-SAREP Cover
679 Hilldale Road Crop Database includes more than 5,000 items
Holtwood, PA 17532 gleaned from more than 600 separate sources,
717-284-5152 including journal articles, conference proceed-
http://www.cedarmeadowfarm.com ings, standard textbooks, unpublished data, and
personal communications from researchers and
Creative Cover Cropping in Annual Farming Sys- farmers. The information in the database con-
tems. 1993. Produced by the University of Cali- cerns the management and effects of more than
fornia, this video depicts opportunities and con- 32 species of plants usable as cover crops. More

PAGE 14 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES


than 400 different cover crop images are also Cedar Meadow Farm’s New Generation Crop-
available for online viewing. One limitation — ping Systems
the database is regionally geared to the Mediter- http://www.cedarmeadowfarm.com
ranean climate of California. Ideally, each
Steve Groff’s New Generation Cropping Sys-
region of the U.S. should enjoy such site-specific
tems Web page. Shows action shots of no-till
information.
planting into mechanically killed cover crops and
The Farming Connection ordering information for Steve Groff’s No-till
http://sunsite.unc.edu/farming-connection/ Vegetables video mentioned above.
covercro/home.htm
USDA Web Site
This site has farmer features and links to other http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/np/tomatoes.html
cover crop sites. It also contains seed sources,
1997. By Aref Abdul-Baki and John R.
general information, Steve Groff’s No-till
Teasdale. USDA Farmers’ Bulletin No. 2279.
Vegetables video listing, and the first edition of
23 p. This Web site provides the USDA
Managing Cover Crops Profitably.
Farmer’s Bulletin that features the no-till
Ohio State On-line Ag Facts vegetable cropping system developed by scien-
http://ohioline.osu.edu/agf-fact/0142.html tists at the USDA-ARS Vegetable Laboratory in
Beltsville, Maryland. This system relies on
This site has an on-line version of Cover Crop
hairy vetch established in the fall, followed by a
Fundamentals by Alan Sundermeier, publication
mow-down treatment the following spring to
number AGF-142-99. This publication covers
prepare a no-till bed to transplant tomatoes and
the benefits of cover crops, planting times, types
other vegetable crops.
of cover crops, managing cover crop growth, and
return on investment. Sustainable Agriculture Network Web site
http://www.sare.org/htdocs/pubs/mccp/
Michigan Cover Crops, Michigan State Univer-
sity and Kellogg Biological Station Managing Cover Crops Profitably, 1st
http://www.kbs.msu.edu/Extension/ Edition (1991).
Covercrops/home.htm
Sustainable Agriculture Network
http://www.sare.org/htdocs/pubs/resources/
The Basics of Green Manuring
index.html
P. Warman. EAP Publication 51, Ecological Ag-
riculture Projects Order the on-line version of: Managing Cover
http://eap.mcgill.ca/Publications/EAP51.htm Crops Profitably, 2nd Edition (1998).
Multiple Impacts Cover Crops.
Cover Crops & Green Manure Crops for Vegetable John Luna, Oregon State University
Farms http://ifs.orst.edu/pubs/
Ohio Vegetable Production Guide 2000 multiple_impacts_cover_cro.html
http://www.ag.ohio-state.edu/~ohioline/b672/
b672_1.html A comprehensive piece on cover crops and their
benefits.
Summer Cover Crops for Tomato Production in South Cover Cropping in Row and Field Crop Systems
Florida http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/ccrop//
http://www.imok.ufl.edu/veghort/pubs/work- slideshows/rfshow01.htm
shop/Bryan99.htm
An online educational slide series that provides
Cover Cropping in Potato Production visual images and text describing the benefits
EAP Publication 71, Ecological Agriculture and uses of cover cropping in annual crops like
Projects vegetables. 52 slides.
http://eap.mcgill.ca/Publications/EAP71.htm

//OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES PAGE 15


Cover Crop Biology: A Mini-Review
Robert L. Bugg
Additional Information from ATTRA
Sustainable Agriculture Research & Education ATTRA can provide more information on spe-
Program, University of California cific cover crops via reprints, summaries of re-
http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/ccrop/ccres/ search, and other resources. This includes mate-
/35.htm rials on living mulches, summer green manures,
winter cover crops, and allelopathic cover crops,
Cover Crops for Sustainable Agriculture – IDRC as well as on specific cover crops like hairy vetch
http://www.idrc.ca/cover_crop/index_e.html and subterranean clover, and on the more ob-
scure cover crops such as crotalaria, velvet bean,
Cover Crops and Living Mulches. Sustainable sesbania, and phacelia.
Practices for Vegetable Production in the South
Dr. Mary Peet, NCSU
http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/sustainable/peet/
cover/c02cover.html
By Preston Sullivan
Planting Dates, Rates, and Methods of Field and NCAT Agriculture Specialist
Forage Crops. University of Florida, Institute of
Food and Agricultural Sciences
Edited by Paul Williams
http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/AA127
Formatted by Gail Hardy
Uses of Cover Crops by Janet Wallace, NSOGA
http://www.gks.com/nccrp/usesofcc.php3 July 2003

Organic Matter/Cover Crops: Green Manure


Crops for Vegetable Farms. Obtaining Accept-
able Stands of Clover and Green Manure Crops.
2000 Ohio Vegetable Production Guide, Bulletin
672-00.
http://ohioline.osu.edu/b672/
organic_matter_cover_crops.html

The electronic version of Overview of Cover


Crops and Green Manures is located at:
HTML
http://www.attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/covercrop.html
PDF
http://www.attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/PDF/
covercrop.pdf

PAGE 16 //OVERVIEW OF COVER CROPS AND GREEN MANURES

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