Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-2lccl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T00:54:42.128Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Diversification for new management systems opportunities in the Pacific Northwest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2009

L.F. Elliott
Affiliation:
Microbiologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, National Forage Seed Production Research Center, Corvallis, OR 97331
P. Chevalier
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164.
Get access

Abstract

Sustainable rainfed cropping systems are needed in the Pacific Northwest of the United States to reduce or eliminate wind and water erosion, improve soil quality, and control weeds with reduced chemical inputs. A grass seed cropping system is excellent for improving soil quality and for controlling erosion, and can be grazed by sheep to produce meat and wool Tilla ge and residue management methods that create a rough surface to reduce wind and water erosion and increase water infiltration include: use of a chisel to create large clods; leaving residue on the surface; and use of the Paratill to shatter the soil to increase water infiltration with little disturbance of the soil surface. Including a legume in the rotation may help to break disease cycles, add N and C to the soil, and improve soil biological properties. The use of surface residues and tillage to control erosion and increase water infiltration may demand new approaches to weed contro I Rhizobacteria that attack the roots of weeds but not of wheat may reduce the need for chemica I herbicides. Research being conducted on these techniques in the Pacific Northwest of the United States and in other countries should soon result in guidelines for sustainable agricultural systems for the dryland, rainfed areas of the world.

Type
Selected Papers from the U.S.-Middle East Conference on Sustainable Dryland Agriculture
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Bakhtri, M.N. 1978. Wheat/forage legume rotation and integration of crop and sheep husbandry in the near East and North Africa. In Cannel, Glen H. (ed). Proc., Int. Symp. on Rainfed Agriculture in Semi-Arid Regions. Univ. of California, Riverside and Oregon State Univ., Corvallis. pp. 520538.Google Scholar
2.Bolton, H. Jr., Elliott, L.F., Papendick, R.I., and Bezdicek, D.E.. 1985. Soil microbial biomass and selected soil enzyme activities: Effect of fertilization and cropping practices. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 17:297302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3.Buntley, G.J. 1986. Tennessee no-tillage update. In Proc., Southern Region Notill Conference Series. Bull. No. 319. Kentucky Agric. Exp. Sta., Lexington, pp. 100102.Google Scholar
4.Doolette, J.G. 1978. The application of the Australian farming system in North Africa. In Cannell, Glen H. (ed). Proc., Int. Symp. on Rainfed Agriculture in Semi-Arid Regions. Univ. of California, Riverside and Oregon State Univ., Corvallis. pp. 589608.Google Scholar
5.Doran, J.W. 1987. Microbial biomass and mineralizable nitrogen distributions in no-tillage and plowed soils. Biology and Fertility of Soils 5:6875.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6.Elliott, L.F., and Lynch, J.M.. 1984. The effect of available carbon and nitrogen in straw on soil and ash aggregation and acetic acid production. Plant and Soil 78:335343.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7.Elliott, L.F., Papendick, R.I., and Bezdicek, D.E.. 1987. Cropping practices using legumes with conservation tillage and soil benefits. In Power, J.F. (ed). The Role of Legumes in Conservation Tillage Systems. Soil Conservation Soc. Amer., Ankeny, Iowa. pp. 8189.Google Scholar
8.Elliott, L.F., Saxton, K.E., and Papendick, R.I.. (1995). The effect of residue management and paratillage on soil water conservation and spring barley yields. J. Soil and Water Conservation 50:656658.Google Scholar
9.Gilmour, C.M., Allen, O.N., and Truog, E.. 1948. Soil aggregation as influenced by the growth of mold species, kind of soil and organic matter. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. Proc. 13:291296.Google Scholar
10.Griffith, D.R., Mannering, J.V., and Box, J.E.. 1982. Soil and moisture management with reduced tillage. In Sprague, M.A. and Triplett, G.B. (eds). No-Tillage and Surface Tillage Agriculture: The Tillage Revolution. John Wiley & Sons, New York, New York. pp. 1957.Google Scholar
11.Hargrove, W.L. (ed). 1982. Proceedings of the Minisymposium on Legume Cover Crops for Conservation Tillage Production Systems. Spec. Pub. 19. Univ. of Georgia, Agric. Exp. Sta., Athens.Google Scholar
12.Heath, M.E., Barnes, R.F., and Metcalfe, D.S. (eds). 1985. Forages: The Science of Grassland Agriculture. Iowa State Univ. Press, Ames.Google Scholar
13.Hoyt, G.D., and Hargrove, W.L.. 1986. Legume cover crops for improving crop and soil management in the southern United States. HortScience 21:397402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14.Kabakci, H., Chevalier, P.M., and Papendick, R.I.. 1993. Impact of tillage and residue management on dryland spring wheat development. Soil and Tillage Research 26:127137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15.Kennedy, A.C., Elliott, L.F., Young, E.L., and Douglas, C.L.. 1991. Rhizobacteria suppressive to the weed downy brome. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. J. 55:722727.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16.Lal, R. 1976. No-tillage effects on sou properties under different crops in Nigeria. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. J. 40:762768.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
17.Lal, R., de Vleeschauwer, D., and Nganje, R. Malafa. 1980. Changes in properties of a newly cleared tropical Alfisol as affected by mulching. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. J. 44:827833.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
18.Lewis, R.D., and Hunter, J.H.. 1940. The nitrogen, organic carbon, and pH of some southeastern coastal plain soils as influenced by green-manure crops. J. Amer. Soc. Agron. 32:586601.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19.Lindstrom, M.J., Koehler, F.E., and Papendick, R.I.. 1974. Tillage effects on fallow water storage in the eastern Washington dryland region. Agron. J. 66:312316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20.Loch, R.J., and Coughlan, K.J.. 1984. Effects of zero tillage and stubble retention on some properties of a cracking clay. Australian J. Soil Research 22:9198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21.Papendick, R.I., and Elliott, L.F.. 1984. Tillage and cropping systems for erosion control and efficient nutrient utilization. In Bezdicek, D.E. and Power, J.E. (eds). Organic Farming: Current Technology and Its Role in a Sustainable Agriculture. Amer. Soc. Agronomy, Madison, Wisconsin, pp. 6981.Google Scholar
22.Papendick, R.I., and Miller, D.E.. 1977. Conservation tillage in the Pacific Northwest. J. Soil and Water Conservation 32:4956.Google Scholar
23.Pidgeon, J.D. 1983. ‘Paraplow’—a new approach to soil loosening. Paper No. 83-2136. Amer. Soc. Agric. Engineers. St. Joseph, Michigan, p. 7.Google Scholar
24.Ramig, R.E., Alunaras, R.R., and Papendick, R.I.. 1983. Water conservation: Pacific Northwest. In Dregne, H.E. and Willis, W.O. (eds). Dryland Agriculture. Agronomy Monograph 23. Amer. Soc. Agronomy, Madison, Wisconsin, pp. 105124.Google Scholar
25.Reganold, J.P., Elliott, L.F., and Unger, Y.L.. 1987. Long-term effects of organic and conventional farming on soil erosion. Nature 330:370372.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
26.Smith, J.L., and Elliott, L.F.. 1990. Tillage and residue management effects on soil organic matter dynamics in semiarid regions. In Singh, R.P. et al. (ed). Dryland Agriculture: Strategies for Sustainability. Advances in Soil Sci. 13. Springer-Verlag, New York, N.Y. pp. 6988.Google Scholar
27.Stewart, B.A., Woolhiser, D.A., Wischmeier, W.H., Caro, J.H., and Frere, M.H.. 1976. Control of water pollution from cropland. Vol. II. U.S. Dept. of Agric, and Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C. p. 187.Google Scholar
28.Williams, W.A. 1966. Management of nonleguminous green manures and crop residues to improve the infiltration rate of an irrigated soil. Soil Sci. Soc. Amer. Proc. 30:631634.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
29.Wilson, G.F., Lal, R., and Okigbo, B.N.. 1982. Effects of cover crops on soil structure and on yield of subsequent arable crops grown under strip tillage OIL an eroded Alfisol. Soil Tillage Research 2:233250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar