By Dan Undersander
How does wheel traffic cause forage loss?
Wheel traffic causes yield reduction in part to both deep soil compaction and surface soil compaction. Another portion of the yield loss is due to cracking or breaking of crowns, which will reduce the shoots produced and may allow entry of disease into the crown.
However, the major damage and cause of yield loss for alfalfa harvested more than two days after cutting is breaking shoots that have begun to regrow.

How much yield is lost from wheel traffic?
The amount of wheel traffic yield reduction is likely to vary from field to field and cutting to cutting depending on plant and soil conditions. Yield loss to the next cutting is greater as the traffic occurs longer after mowing. The yield loss has generally been 4 to 6% per day after mowing (e.g. traffic 5 days after mowing creates a yield loss of about 22%).
What can be done to reduce losses?