COLUMBIA, Mo.-The rains in the Midwest this spring have increased erosion in many areas. A University of Missouri soil scientist says the damage could have some serious impact on crops later this year.
"Even the untrained eye of citizens who don't think about agriculture on a day-by-day basis can see the erosion on side slopes," says Newell Kitchen, adjunct associate professor of soil science at MU's College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources. "From the freeway between Kansas City and St. Louis, it doesn't take much to see the scars of erosion that has taken place with the heavy water accumulation."
Kitchen, who is also a soil scientist for the USDA Agricultural Research Service, says rain has washed away quite a bit of sediment from fields, and there is very little crop in some of those areas.
"In addition to that, in foot slopes where crops were planted, the accumulated sediment has in some areas covered the plants, causing a loss of stand," Kitchen says.