1. Rotating peanut into established bahiagrass pastures: identifying sustainable tillage operations.
- Author
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Na, Chae-In, Cook, Adam M., Rowland, Diane L., Wright, David L., Bennett, Jerry M., Smith, Amanda, Ferrell, Jason A., and Mulvaney, Michael J.
- Subjects
TILLAGE ,AGRICULTURE ,AGRICULTURAL equipment ,SOIL management ,CROP rotation - Abstract
Integrating bahiagrass (
Paspalum notatum Flueggé) into peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) production systems can improve soil structure, and increase peanut yield. A study was conducted in 2012 and 2013 in north Florida to evaluate practices for planting peanut into bahiagrass with three tillage methods i.e.; strip till (ST), ST and high residue cultivation (ST/HRC), and conventional (CT) tillage. Tillage times were 30 d before planting (DATE1) and at planting (DATE2). Peanut grown under CT outyielded ST/HRC (6940, 6580, and 6370 kg ha−1 for CT, ST, and ST/HRC, respectively), but there was no difference in economic return across treatments (adjusted revenue avg. = US $2478 ha−1 ). Tillage DATE2 increased total root length compared with DATE1, particularly for CT and ST. The ST/HRC had increased total root length below 30 cm for DATE1. When peanut was planted into bahiagrass, conservation tillage practices maintained adjusted revenue comparable with CT while providing environmental benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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