Title: Organic Programs at UIUC
1Organic Programs at UIUC
2Organic Task Force
- Task force active 2000-2001
- Campus-based faculty and extension field staff
assessed the needs of stakeholders goal was to
identify current activities and interest among
faculty and staff communicate the results of the
assessments and develop recommendations for
College Administrators. - A survey of 76 faculty and Extension personnel
found 48 have engaged in organic outreach or
research and 82 are interested in participating
in future organic outreach and research. - Key informant interviews and listening sessions
all indicated that University of Illinois has a
vital role to play in organic research and
outreach.
3Task force recommendations
- Appoint an External Advisory Committee
- Program Leader
- Demonstrate strong support for organic research
and outreach - Formalize an organic team
- Establish a position for an Extension Educator in
Organic Agriculture - Allocate sizable land for organic research
4Summary of activity 2001-2005
We have been busy but have we been productive?
5IL Resources For Organic
UIUC CAMPUS UIUC EXTENSION OTHER
STATE INSTITUTIONS
Bill Brink Susanne Bissonnette Deborah
Cavanaugh-Grant George Czapar Carrie Edgar Cindy
Enzler Peter Fandel Rhonda Ferree Doug
Gucker Mark Hoard Andy Larson Gary Letterly John
Peverly Mike Plumer Ellen Phillips Sandy
Mason Mark Maidak Mike Roegge Steve Schwoerer
Bill Shoemaker Martha Smith Kim Tack JoAn
Todd Elizabeth Wahle Wesley Winter
- Dan Anderson
- Larry Berger
- Leslie Cooperband
- Darin Eastburn
- Ken Koelkebeck
- John Masiunas
- Mike Mazzacco
- Greg McIsaac
- Dave Onstad
- Anne Reisner
- Sonya Salmon
- Ken Salo
- Anne Silvis
- Jim Schmidt
- John Swiader
- Ben Tracy
- Chuck Voigt
- Michelle Wander
- Rick Weinzerl
- Illinois Natural History Survey
- Cathy Eastman
- John Lundgren
- John Shaw
- Ed Zaborski
- Western Illinois University
- Gerry Vigue
- Southern Illinois University
- Leslie Durham
- Mike Rahe
- Bob Reese
Illinois Department of Agriculture
6Organic Standards
- National Organic Program guidelines set in 2002
state organic food is produced by farmers who
emphasize the use of renewable resources and the
conservation of soil and water to enhance
environmental quality for future generations.Â
Organic meat, poultry, eggs, and dairy products
come from animals that are given no antibiotics
or growth hormones and fed organic feed. Organic
food is produced without using most conventional
pesticides fertilizers made with synthetic
ingredients or sewage sludge bioengineering
(GMOs) or ionizing radiation. Â - Funding for organic research has increased in
step from - 1.6 million in 1999 to 5 million in 2006
Legal definition of organic distinguishes and
separates if from sustainable ag research
7Less than 1 of available research acreage is
devoted to organic production at Land Grant
Universities.
From OFRF's 'State of the States' 2nd edition,
2003, acreages generally rouned to nearest half
acre.
8Sir Albert Howard on the unsoundness of Rothamsted
- notes the "manifold weakness of small-plot
investigations - "in an evil moment were invented the replicated
and randomized experimental plots, by means of
which the statisticians can be furnished with all
the data needed for their esoteric and fastidious
ministrations."
Farming and Gardening for Health or Disease.
Chapter VI The intrusion of science (1945)
9Organic Research Team
- Illinois Natural History Survey (INHS)
- Pest management Catherine Eastman and John Shaw
- Soil invertebrate ecology Ed Zaborski
- Northern Grains Insect Research Laboratory
(USDA-ARS) - Insect predator ecology and biological control
Jonathan Lundgren - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
(UIUC) - Outreach Dan Anderson and Deborah
Cavanaugh-Grant, NRES - Weed ecology and management John Masiunas ,
NRES Adam Davis, USDA - Soil organic matter and soil fertility Michelle
Wander, NRES - Plant pathology Darin Eastburn, Crop Sciences
- Microbial ecology Angela Kent, NRES JoAnne Chee
Sanford, USDA - Compost Leslie Cooperband, Human Community
Development
10Group conception of process
Participatory Outreach
Participatory Research
11WORT Transition Project History
- 200102 informal discussions with experienced
organic growers on approaches to transition. Â - Late 02 six acres assigned to the IL Natural
History Survey made available for organic
research planted to winter rye cover crop. - March 6 03 Organic Farming Research Workshop
with experienced organic growers. - March 13 03 Telephone discussions with other
experienced organic growers. - March 31 03 Research proposal submitted to
USDA IPM Organic Transitions Program.Â
We took action before acquiring finding- advised
by N. Creamer
12Grower-advisors
Henry Brockman, Henry's Farm Kevin and Juli
Brussel, Rainy Creek Farm David and Mary
Campbell, Lily Lake Organic Farm Jon Cherniss,
Blue Moon Farm David Cleverdon, Kinnikinnick
Farm Alan DeYoung, Van Drunen Farms Marvin and
Carol Manges, Fizzle Flat Farm John Peterson,
Angelic Organics Allen Williams, Ridgeline
Farm 4 fresh market fruit and vegetable 4 row
crop/specialty grain producers 1 producer of
fresh/dried herbs
13Cropping intensity and organic amendments in
transitional farming systems
- WORT Objectives
- To compare the influence of transition schemes
that differ in - management intensity (cropping, tillage) and
- organic matter inputs
- on
- weed populations,
- soil organic matter and fertility,
- soil invertebrates, and
- the relationship between soil fertility, plant
health and insect/disease pressure
14 Three Farming Systems
Intermediate Intensity System
1. Cover Crops Compost 2. Cover Crops
Manure 3. Cover Crops only
Low Intensity System
1. Cover Crops Compost 2. Cover Crops
Manure 3. Cover Crops only
High Intensity System
1. Cover Crops Compost 2. Cover Crops
Manure 3. Cover Crops only
15M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C
M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C
M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C
M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C
M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C
M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C M/C
16Systems research in replicated trials- design and
objectives
- Refine organic systems
- Can not compare components
- Hypothesis test to form generalizations
- Compare systems in the certification year
- Can imbed adaptive management and methods
questions inside
17Weeds (John Masiunas, NRES, UIUC)
- Research Questions
- Does cropping intensity or soil/fertility
management influence weed populations? - Do weed populations change through the transition
period? - Methods
- Emerged weed counts
- Seedbank
18Summary of weed results
- Initial emerged weed population dominated by
grasses, lambsquarters (CHEAL), and velvetleaf
(ABUTH). - Species diversity increases
- Water hemps and pigweeds (Amaranthus spp.) become
common in third year - Purslane (POROL) became common in vegetable system
19Emerged Weed Species
- 2003 2004__ __2005__
- Weed Grain Veget Grain Veget Grain Veget
- __________________________________________
- ------------------ weed population
---------------- - Grass 1 39 12 5 42 13
- CHEAL 65 40 67 60 25 12
- ABUTH 23 14 0 12 4 18
- Amaranthus 2 1 1 2 10 22
- SIDSP 5 3 3 8 7 11
- IPOME 3 2 0 7 4 6
- CISAR 1 1 1 0 1 4
- TAXOF 0 0 9 0 4 0
- POROL 0 0 0 0 1 14
- __________________________________________
20Summary of weed results
- Between years 1 and 4 the number of weeds per
plot decreased. - Ley system had fewest weeds
- Lambsquarters decreases during transition due to
later plantings - Vegetable system had fewer weeds than grain
systems - Hand-weeding in vegetable system
21Summary of weed results
- Seed bank diversity increased during experiment
- Amaranthus seed were very common even when few
emerged plants - Species composition of seed bank similar to
emerged weeds
22- Canada thistle populations are becoming a priority
Farmer reports call for on farm research project
23Plant Diseases (Darin Eastburn, Crop Sciences,
UIUC)
- Research Questions
- Does soil/fertility management influence disease
incidence? - Does cropping intensity or soil/fertility
management influence disease suppressiveness of
soils? - Methods
- Field sampling
- Greenhouse experiments
24Leaf rust on pasture grasses - 2004
data Eastburn
252006 vegetable diseases in plots with different
cropping intensity histories
b
a
a
a
a
ab
b
b
b
262006 tomato diseases affected by organic
amendment history
a
ab
b
a
ab
b
27Disease Suppressive Soil Bioassay on Soybeans
infected with SDS Foliar and Root Symptoms
a
b
bc
c
a
b
c
d
28Bioassay on soybeans infected with SDS Root
Length and Volume Effects
a
b
c
c
a
a
b
b
29Bioassay on soybeans infected with Rhizoctonia
year 20042006
a
bc
bc
b
c
a
b
b
b
30Disease Summary
- Cropping history and amendment treatments did
have an effect on diseases in the field - Cropping history and amendments did not have an
effect on disease suppressiveness of the soil - Over all treatments, disease suppressiveness of
the soils increased over time (years)
31Predatory Insects and Biological Control(Jon
Lundgren, USDA-ARS, Cathy Eastman, Ed Zaborski,
INHS)
- Research Questions
- Does cropping intensity or soil/fertility
management influence the abundance and activity
of predatory arthropods, such as spiders and
ground beetles? - Methods
- Pitfall trapping (activity)
- Bait stations caterpillars, weed seeds
(activity) - Quadrat samples (abundance)
32Ground Beetle Activity
data Lundgren
33Predator abundance and diversity
data Lundgren
34- Soils Objectives
- To understand the relationship between soil
management, soil biological activity and soil
quality. - Â
- Wander and Ugarte
- Methods
- Carbon metabolism (microbial activity)
- Plant available N (IL-N and PMN)
- Nematode community composition
35During transition- Carmen Ugarte
N starts high and stay there, IL-NT not a
sensitive to trts as PSNT
36Nematode Abundances
a
A
Plant Feeders Bacterial Feeders Fungal Feeders
A
b
b
B
crops
Abundance of bacterial feeders indicative of N
rich system
37Fluorescein Diacetate (FDA)
Effects of systems and manure on heterotrophic
activity found
382006 preplant soil condition
POM and plant avail N high in all systems
39Nematode Maturity Index
At this point in time systems are N rich,
physical condition high
40Preliminary Summary
Regardless of amendment type, all three
transition strategies were able to build adequate
POM-C concentrations and may have produced N
concentrations that are in excess. This is also
suggested by the nematode community
analysis. Our results show the dynamics of
nematode populations, which are expected to
become more enriched and less structured,
following soil preparation for planting. Future
research will determine whether POM-C in these
plots remains in high concentrations and whether
this is predictive of the nematodes ability to
recover from agronomic soil management.
41M. Wander-NRES
Grand unified field theory- SOM and Soil
Quality as system controls
NO3
A. Simple agronomic systems that rely on
inorganic N/ P and are frequently C limited
NH4 Limited competition, Net mineralization
important
Organic N
C. Natural and diversified systems that are C
rich and N/P limited
B. Diversified systems that are C and N/P rich
NH4 Plants and microbes actively compete and
partner
42 2005 Illinois Organic Production Conference
- Farmer identified problems
- weeds soil balance, efficiency nutrition pest
management marketing intensive rotational
grazing labor issues waterfowl poultry
processing and transition. - Researcher identified problems
- science-based information lack of communication
between researchers and farmers and the need to
integrate livestock into research.
43Information and training needs
- Most stakeholders indicated they get their
information from the internet. They desire an
organic web page with links to the most helpful
organic sites. - They are only interested in publications with
significant sections related organic agriculture.
- Stakeholders wanted to have demonstrations of
organic practices being used in real-world
situations. - They also wanted an internship program with
current organic farmers teaching new producers.
44Where to from here?
- Mites- food web
- Global Warming Potential
- SCI
- Plant Quality
- Breeding
- Microbial Community
- Weed seed decay
- Economics
- Equipment needs
- Transaction costs high
- Land uncertainty
- Management
- Utility
- Outreach
- Shifting funding focus
45Future Scenarios
- continue to conduct research on now certified
organic ground at UIUC or take another approach-
eg on-farm? - write up lessons learned and prepare
extension-style bulletins (hard copy as well as
electronic) so that the IL-specific information
is available to for IL growers - improve communication with farmer advisors and
stakeholders- developing a workshop on
transitioning to organic using the research from
the WORT trial (along with economic data)
consider integrating this information into Farm
Beginnings and eOrganic opportunities. Â
46Acknowledgements
- USDA-CSREES Organic Transitions Program (Award
no. ORG 2003-51106-02086) - Illinois Natural History Survey
- Department of Natural Resources and Environmental
Sciences, UIUC - University of Illinois Agricultural Experiment
Station