By Susan E. Wagner and Virginia Jin et.al
Farm profitability from grain production is an age-old concern of farmers. Improving yield stability is also an important management strategy to counteract weather extremes (i.e., heat waves, droughts, flooding) that stress both crop growth and farm profitability. Farmers need reliable information about the effectiveness of crop rotation and fertilizer management that involves many years of data to account for the year-to-year variability in growing conditions.
Here, we share the results from a long-term rainfed no-till crop rotation and nitrogen (N) fertilizer systems study conducted by the USDA Agricultural Research Service at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Eastern Nebraska Research and Extension Center (ENREC) (Table 1). While producers typically increase fertilizer amounts for continuous crops, fertilizer inputs were determined by the crop phase present during the year of application to maintain experimental uniformity.
Table 1. Site treatment descriptions and starting year.1Treatment | Year Started | Description | Abbreviation |
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Crop rotation | 1972 | Continuous corn | CC |
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| | Continuous soybean | SS |
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| | Continuous grain sorghum | GG |
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| | Corn – soybean | CS |
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| | Grain sorghum – soybean | GS |
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| | Corn – soybean – grain sorghum – oat/clover2 | CSGO |
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| | Corn – oat/clover – grain sorghum – soybean | COGS |
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Nitrogen rate3 | 1982 | No N (0 lb N/ac) | 0N |
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| | Low N (80 lb N/ac for C, G; 30 lb N/ac for S) | Low N |
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| | High N (160 lb N/ac for C, G; 60 lb N/ac for S) | High N |
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