Just as lentils add variety to a soup, Dr. Emi Kimura believes they could add variety to the crop options for wheat producers in the Rolling Plains.
Lentils may be a potential winter crop for the Rolling Plains of Texas
Lentils are legumes that grow in pods on a bushy plant, and as a legume, they are high in nitrogen, which would be beneficial for the following wheat crop, Kimura, a Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service agronomist in Vernon, said.
“In the Rolling Plains of Texas, our crop options are limited because of rainfall,” she said. “Our average is 25 inches of annual precipitation, but that is not spread out through the growing season. Primarily it comes in the spring and fall, so during the summer growing season, we really don’t have enough moisture. We have to concentrate on drought-tolerant crops.”
Currently, she said, the crop options for fall planting are limited to canola. Canola has done very well, improving soil tilth for the following wheat production.
“But it would be nice to have an additional crop rotation option to not only improve soil health, but to also improve wheat production,” Kimura said. “Lentil is a grain legume that can improve overall fertility in the soil through nitrogen fixation as well as allow grassy weed control and break disease cycles.”
Lentils are also known to be very tolerant to the extreme environmental conditions such as high temperatures and low limited moisture conditions, she said.
“If we get too much stress during the flowering or fruit set, that might reduce the yield potential, but it is still a strong drought-tolerant crop that can be planted as a winter crop,” Kimura said.
In the U.S., the lentil crop is generally planted in the Pacific Northwest in Washington and Idaho and is planted in the spring, she said. However, there have been considerable studies to improve the winter hardiness of lentils so they can be planted in the fall as winter lentils.
“I believe winter lentils will work better than spring lentils because our summer precipitation is so low and summer heat might be too high,” Kimura said.
“I planted a variety called Morton winter lentil on Sept. 30 at the AgriLife Research station at Chillicothe, along with winter wheat and canola, just to compare the rotation options. Next year I will come back and plant winter wheat after the winter lentil to investigate how it positively or negatively affects the winter wheat.”
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