“Applying manure early in the spring synchronized with a growing cover crop, when temperatures are cooler, can reduce ammonia and nitrous oxide emissions compared to later in the spring when temperatures are warmer, and the cover crop has been terminated,” said first author Sailesh Sigdel, a doctoral degree candidate in agricultural and environmental plant science. “This practice offers a potential strategy to simultaneously achieve multiple conservation and agronomic goals.”
Many no-till dairy farmers grow winter crops, such as cereal rye or annual ryegrass and red clover, between corn and forage crops grown for cattle feed, noted research team leader Heather Karsten, associate professor of crop production/ecology in the College of Agricultural Sciences.
“Cover crops are grown to increase soil organic matter and improve soil fertility by capturing excess nutrients after a summer annual crop is harvested,” she said. “They also help prevent soil erosion, limit nutrient runoff, improve soil structure and can even help suppress weeds.”
The surest way to prevent nitrogen loss as ammonia gas and nitrogen-laden runoff is to inject liquid manure below the surface of the ground, Karsten said, explaining this approach is considered a best management practice to lessen agricultural pollution in the troubled Chesapeake Bay watershed, to which Pennsylvania belongs. But it’s not a perfect strategy.
“While manure injection typically conserves ammonia, we also know that conserved nitrogen can contribute to increased emissions of nitrous oxide — a potent greenhouse gas that is contributing to climate change — through a process in the soil known as nitrification and denitrification,” she said. “In 2022, about 75% of U.S. nitrous oxide emissions were from agriculture. So, our research focused on how to reduce those emissions.”
In experiments conducted at Penn State’s Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center, the researchers compared four dairy farming scenarios. They evaluated early spring surface broadcasting and liquid dairy manure injection for a growing cover crop, as well as with late-spring applications for a cover crop that was terminated by an herbicide.
“Our study found that when manure was injected into live cover crops in early spring, it reduced nitrous oxide loss by 55% while maintaining yields compared to the current recommended injection practice of applying manure after terminating cover crops before corn planting,” Sigdel said. “This approach offers a potential win-win manure and cover crop management strategy, achieving both agronomic and environmental goals.”
Curtis Dell, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Pasture Systems and Watershed Management Research station at University Park, contributed to the research.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture supported this research.
Source : psu.edu