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Ground Prep

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planter tills band of soil and plants. bares 1/3 of soil. 50% residue. Conservation Tillage ... specialized planters. 90% untouched ground. Herbicides used to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ground Prep


1
Ground Prep
  • Tillage working the soil to provide a good
    environment for seed placement, germination, and
    crop growth

2
4 goals for Tillage
  • 1. Weed Control
  • Before Planting
  • Kill weeds
  • weakens perennials
  • After Planting
  • destroys weeds
  • covers seedlings

3
2. Alteration of Physical Soil Conditions
  • Structure, Moisture, and Temperature
  • Stirs and loosens soil
  • improves aeration
  • creates suitable medium for growth
  • may breakup soil compaction

4
2. Alteration of Physical Soil Conditions
  • Causes long term decline in Structure
  • loss of organic matter
  • crushes soil aggregates
  • Moisture and Temperature
  • tilled warms earlier, causes earlier seeding and
    better germination

5
3. Crop Residue Management
  • amount depends on crop
  • 8500 lbs./acre off of 150 Bu corn
  • 5600lbs/acre off of 100 Bu corn

6
3. Crop Residue Management
  • amount depends on type of tillage
  • Plowing 5
  • Field Cultivator 80
  • Chisel 80
  • Disc 6 25, 3 50
  • Harrow 65

7
4. Seedbed Preparation
  • Culmination of previous 3 aspects
  • Meets requirements for seed to grow
  • moisture, temperature
  • aerated, yet compacted
  • free of clods
  • Type of seed determines how smooth you need
    seedbed

8
Were you listening?
  • Describe the following
  • Weed Control
  • Soil Conditions
  • Crop residues
  • Seed bed preparation

9
Conventional Tillage
  • Primary Tillage
  • Breaks up soil and buries crop residue
  • inverting equipment
  • Plowing, time consuming, no residue
  • Discing

10
Conventional Tillage
  • Secondary Tillage
  • Produces fine seedbed that breaks up into smaller
    chunks
  • mixing implements

11
Conservation Tillage
  • Leaves 30 of residue
  • reduces erosion by 40-50
  • reduced tillage
  • fewer trips, compaction less

12
Conservation Tillage
  • Mulch Till
  • Chisel, Secondary, 30-50 residue
  • Strip Till
  • No Primary tillage
  • planter tills band of soil and plants
  • bares 1/3 of soil
  • 50 residue

13
Conservation Tillage
  • Ridge Till
  • plants cleaned strip
  • seed planted on ridge
  • 2/3 residue

14
Conservation Tillage
  • No Till
  • specialized planters
  • 90 untouched ground
  • Herbicides used to control weeds rather than
    tillage

15
Differences between Conservation and
Conventional
  • Yields
  • slightly lower in Conservation
  • Equipment
  • conservation needs specialized, but fewer
  • Fertility
  • Conservation remains moist longer,
  • N needs to be deeper incorporated in Conservation
  • pH may be higher

16
Drawbacks to Conservation
  • Management
  • Adapted for select soils
  • Perennials can be a problem
  • Compaction in No Till can be a problem
  • pH lowers
  • Use of herbicides

17
Checking for understanding
  • In conservation tillage why do you need as much
    as or more equipment than conventional?
  • From the soil perspective, why is conservation
    tillage a valuable tool to consider?

18
Cropping Systems
  • 3 Different ways to decide what to plant

19
1. Plant the Market
  • Plant what the market wants you to, highest price

20
2. Suit to Operation
  • Plant what you will use in ag operation

21
3. Crop Rotation
  • 1.Continuous Cropping
  • grows same crop every year
  • yields decline after several years

22
3. Crop Rotation
  • Disadvantages
  • planting less profitable crops
  • do not use crops that you need to plant

23
3. Crop Rotation
  • Advantages
  • Control disease and insects
  • Control weeds
  • allelopathy chemical emitted by a crop that
    kills weeds in next crop
  • supplies N
  • Improves O.M.
  • Reduces erosion

24
Dryland Farming
  • No irrigation
  • Summer Fallow
  • left fallow for 1 crop season
  • control weeds and crop on field
  • 25 of rain will be stored in ground

25
Dryland Farming
  • 3 Problems
  • 1. Wind erosion
  • 2. Decline in O.M.
  • 3. Saline Seeps

26
Dryland Farming
  • Saline Seeps
  • Deep rock layer stops water and pushes it
    downhill
  • water carries salt with it
  • comes out at low spots of hill
  • water evaporates leaving salt behind

27
Dryland Farming
  • Avoid saline seeps by moving the water before it
    can evaporate

28
Rangeland
  • Things to do to make rangeland more productive
  • 1. Control grazing
  • 2. Fertilize
  • 3. Seed out new plants

29
Organic Farming
  • No inorganic fertilizers or synthetic pesticides
    are used
  • Usually use rotation w/legumes to supply N
  • Rely on tillage and cultivation
  • rotary hoe

30
Organic Farming
  • Results of O.F.
  • better bean and oats yield
  • erosion is reduced
  • use 1/3 of energy
  • sell to regular markets
  • some utilize only part organic

31
Quiz Time
  • List the four goals of tillage.
  • Briefly describe conventional and conservation
    tillage. Compare each.
  • What are three factors that affect what you will
    plant.
  • What do dryland farmers do to increase
    productivity
  • How do organic farmers maintain their nitrogen?
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