Direct Driller Magazine Issue 10

Page 53

WEED SUPPRESSION WITH COVER CROPS: IT'S ALL ABOUT BIOMASS Written by Dr. Bob Hartzler and Meaghan Anderson of Iowa State University

One important benefit of cover crops to our production system is providing an alternative selection pressure on weed populations. Cereal rye has the best potential to suppress weeds because it accumulates more biomass than other cover crop species. Weed suppression is closely related to the amount of biomass at the time of termination (Figure 1).

in both waterhemp emergence and growth (Figures 2-4). The low rye biomass treatment reduced waterhemp growth more than it did emergence, whereas the high biomass treatment dramatically reduced both emergence and growth. Waterhemp emergence was delayed more than two weeks in the high rye treatment compared to

Figure 5. 10,000 lb/A rye biomass.

the 0 and 900 lb rye treatments. In the high residue treatment, \c seedlings had to navigate through an inch of mulch to reach full sunlight (Figure 5). Hypotocotyl needed to elongate 1.25 inches to get through the rye mulch. Many factors influence the biomass produced by cereal rye, most important are planting date and termination date. Rye's tillering ability reduces the importance of seeding rate except in situations with late planting. A minimum seeding rate of 1-1.5 bu/ac is typically recommended. Increased seeding rates will provide more consistent stands when rye is seeding using an airplane or other broadcast methods, as well as when seeding occurs in October or later.

Figure 1. Influence on cover crop biomass on weed suppression. Webster et al. 2013. Crop Protection.

The importance of biomass on weed suppression can be easily observed in a demonstration evaluating suppression of waterhemp by cereal rye developed for the 2020 Farm Progress Show. Treatments represented no cover crop, an early termination when rye was 6-8 inches tall (900 lb/A), and late termination when rye was flowering (10,000 lb/A1). Three weeks after planting there were dramatic differences

Figure 3. 900 lb/A rye biomass

For most farms, cover crops provide an opportunity to achieve more consistent weed control and lower selection pressure for herbicide resistance, rather than allowing significant reductions in herbicide use. Farmers desiring to reduce herbicide use must manage the cover crop to maximize weed suppression. Target early seeding dates, typically before late September. Seeding with a drill typically results in the most consistent stand across crop fields. Termination timing should be delayed past mid-May to ensure rye biomass is maximized for the most persistent weed suppression. 110,000 lbs/A of rye biomass is higher than typically achieved in Iowa. The rye was drilled after harvesting corn for silage, and termination was delayed until mid-May. Conversion chart - 1 bushel/acre = 62.77

Figure 2. No rye cover crop

DIRECT DRILLER MAGAZINE

Figure 5. Waterhemp seedling that emerged in high biomass treatment.

kilograms/hectare

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Articles inside

Approach to Improving Soil Health

7min
pages 89-90

What to read?

6min
pages 98-100

US Cover Crop Information

4min
pages 91-93

Is Magnesium the Missing Link

8min
pages 87-88

Farmer Focus: Adam Driver

8min
pages 80-82

Farmer Focus: George Sly

8min
pages 83-84

Soil Workshops at the ORFC

15min
pages 85-86

Strategic Cereal Farm Week

8min
pages 70-73

It's all about biomass

2min
page 53

Organic Wheat Varieties Part 2

15min
pages 63-69

Farmer Focus: David White

6min
pages 60-62

Fertilisers fit for a Carbon-focused Future

12min
pages 42-45

Water in Focus: New Technologies

5min
pages 38-41

Farmer Focus: Andy Howard

5min
pages 36-37

Field Mulch Lab

9min
pages 46-47

New Horizons for Soil Research

11min
pages 18-23

Agronomy Service of the Future

18min
pages 30-35

Seed Breeding and a Sustainable Future

9min
pages 26-29

Featured Farmer: James Alexander

8min
pages 6-7

Farmer Focus: Neil White

7min
pages 24-25

Treating our soils like dirt

14min
pages 14-17

Path to Conservation Agriculture

6min
pages 12-13

Agricultural Ethics

10min
pages 8-11
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