Direct Driller Magazine Issue 11

Page 32

DOCTORAL CANDIDATE RECEIVES ENDOWMENT TO HELP FUND ORGANIC FIELD PEA RESEARCH Written by Denise Attaway, Clemson University, South Carolina USA Phosphorous is one of six essential nutrients for plants and a Clemson University doctoral candidate wants to show farmers how organically growing cereal and pulse crops can improve nutrition while lowering production costs.

Sarah Powers is a doctoral candidate in the Clemson Plant and Environmental Sciences Department. Her research focuses on understanding phosphorususe efficiency in field pea. To help fund her studies, Powers has received a Columbus Hamond Townsend Student Assistant Endowment for the second consecutive year. “I want to determine if it is possible to select cultivars that can sustain growth and yield under phosphoruslimited conditions,” said Powers. According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), organic farming is a production system that incorporates practices, such as cover cropping and crop rotation, to improve soil quality and build organic soil matter. Phosphorous is a naturally-occurring element found in the soil. All living organisms require phosphorus. Plants use phosphorous for photosynthesis, storage and transfer of energy, and respiration among various other functions. While phosphorus is very important to agriculture, it is a non-renewable resource and cannot be naturally replaced quickly enough to keep up with consumption. “This can be particularly limiting for organic growers,” Powers said. “Phosphorous-use efficiency will become a greater concern as phosphorous fertilizers become more expensive and difficult to obtain.” Organic agriculture could benefit from phosphorous-use efficient field pea cultivars by increasing yields and soil nutrition. Greater yields of field pea could benefit health food markets as these peas are highly nutritious and have superior protein quality, Powers

32 DIRECT DRILLER MAGAZINE

Sarah Powers, a Clemson doctoral candidate in Plant and Environmental Sciences, is studying phosphorususe efficiency in field pea. Image Credit: Clemson University

said. Powers’ research is part of a study that involves developing pulse and cereal grain crops that can be grown organically in South Carolina. The study is funded by a nearly $1 million grant from the USDA and is led by Clemson professors Dil Thavarajah, Rick Boyles, and Stephen Kresovich. The USDA is using cooperative research on pulse crops, such as dry beans, dry peas, lentils, and chickpeas; to provide solutions to the critical health and sustainability challenges facing people living in the United States and across the globe. “Current organic grain production depends on cultivars that have been bred for non-organic production, but these often are not suitable for organic

production,” Thavarajah said. “We need varieties that can be organically grown.” By using organic farming practices, farmers don’t need to buy expensive chemicals and fertilizers. Instead, they use farming practices, such as different tillage methods and cover-cropping for weed control, and biological methods for insect pest control. Organic farming is sometimes equated with lower yields and nutritional quality. “This research will allow for the breeding of future biofortified field pea cultivars with increased economic returns,” Powers said. “These traits will make field peas more desirable and popular in the organic market, as well as better able to resolve micronutrient deficiencies.”

ISSUE 11 | OCTOBER 2020


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Articles inside

Soil Farmer of the Year 2020

11min
pages 88-91

BASE UK

8min
pages 84-87

Embracing the no-till Greenhouse Effect

12min
pages 78-83

Breaking the Cycle

6min
pages 76-77

Soil Carbon Sequestration

6min
pages 92-93

Field Robots

8min
pages 72-75

What is Healthy Soil Video

3min
pages 94-95

Robots as everyday tools

5min
pages 70-71

More Support for Agroiforestry required

3min
page 69

Methane and Microbes

12min
pages 64-68

AHDB - Arbuscular Mycorrhizae

15min
pages 56-63

AHDB - Will it work for us

3min
page 55

Evolution of the £8000 Zero-till Drill

9min
pages 48-51

AHDB - Feeling Tired

10min
pages 52-54

Deeptill Radish

9min
pages 44-47

Why Agriculture is a practice

7min
pages 42-43

Unlocking Gypsum

2min
pages 40-41

Farmer Focus: Andy Howard

12min
pages 36-39

Ecological Principle of Weed Management

8min
pages 26-27

Farmer Focus: Simon Cowell

4min
page 15

Why is Synthetic Nitrogen burning Carbon?

9min
pages 34-35

Organic Field Pea Research

2min
pages 32-33

Farmer Focus: Tim Parton

9min
pages 28-31

Featured Farmer: Martin Lines

10min
pages 6-9

Are Nitrogen Stabilizers worth Using?

7min
pages 22-25

Time Running out for Many Soils

4min
pages 10-11
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