Cradle to Coastlines – December 2020

Page 11

Looking after soil structure can prevent erosion As we move into summer, the weather is finally warming and spring-sown crops such as onions and pyrethrum are beginning to emerge.

Using a simple cover crop will result in root growth improving soil structure and water infiltration, as well as increasing nutrient cycling and supporting microbial populations.

These two crops require a particularly fine and well-prepared seedbed to allow adequate seed-to-soil contact for their small seeds to germinate and establish. Therefore, good paddock preparation to manage soil structure is essential.

An added benefit is that the cover crop used in this case would protect the soil from winter rainfall events, further reducing the risk of erosion in the preceding season to sowing your cash crop.

Good soil structure below the seedbed is also important to consider, to allow rainfall and irrigation water to infiltrate down into the soil profile.

When using a cover crop between cash crops, it is important to clearly identify a sowing and termination date, so that aboveground plant biomass doesn’t get out of control and become a problem to manage.

Achieving this will reduce the risk of surface runoff eroding the well-prepared seedbed until the crop is sufficiently established to bind the topsoil together itself.

Above-ground plant biomass height of 15-20 cm is sufficient to protect the soil, as well as being manageable to terminate without creating issues with unwanted moisture.

Cultivation alone is unlikely to prevent soil erosion if the soil structure below the seedbed is less than optimal, even if physical erosion management techniques, such as rip lines across slope contours of the paddock, are utilised.

Cradle Coast Authority, through funding from the Australian Government’s National Landcare Program, is trialling simple cover crop blends which can be used to condition and protect our productive soils between vegetable and other cash crops.

There are options to consider which can be used several months before planting to better prepare paddocks for fine-seeded and slowestablishing crops sown in spring.

For more information contact coordinator Ali Dugand adugand@cradlecoast.com

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