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a USDA Sustainable Agriculture Network, Beltsville, MD 20705-2351
b USDA-ARS, Animal and Natural Resources Inst., Beltsville, MD 20705
c Dep. of Natural Resource Sciences and Landscape Architecture, Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742
d Lower Eastern Shore Research and Education Center, Salisbury, MD 21801
* Corresponding author (aclark{at}sare.org)
Received for publication December 30, 2005. Cover crop spring kill date and species affect spring water use by covers, summer moisture conservation by cover crop residue, and yield of subsequent corn (Zea mays L.). Data are needed on spring management strategies for cover crop mixtures of hairy vetch (HV) (Vicia villosa Roth) and cereal rye (Secale cereale L.), compared to pure stands, to make accurate corn fertilizer nitrogen (FN) recommendations and to optimize moisture use vs. conservation by cover crop mixtures. A 2-yr study evaluated a grass-selective herbicide (GSH) applied in late March to a pure rye cover and a vetchrye mixture, allowing the vetch to accumulate N until early May. These treatments were compared to early May-killed pure rye, pure vetch, vetchrye mixture, and no-cover control. Corn FN rates of 0, 45, 90, 180, and 270 kg ha1 were applied in June. Corn grain yield was greater following pure stands of vetch than following any other cover crop treatment, regardless of kill date. The average economic optimum FN rate was about 150 kg N ha1 without a cover. With a cover crop and compared to the control, the hairy vetch replaced about 80 kg FN ha1, the vetchrye mixture replaced about 15 kg FN ha1, while the pure rye removed an additional 50 kg FN ha1. Spring soil moisture (020 cm) beneath growing covers was greater than or equal to the no-cover controls throughout the spring and the summer. There was no significant difference in corn FN response for the early kill date of rye with a GSH, compared with the conventional late-kill date.
Abbreviations: CKL, no-cover check DM, dry matter FN, fertilizer N GSH, grass selective herbicide HV, hairy vetch LSD, least significant difference MXL, late-killed vetchrye mixed cover MXP, early killed rye in vetchrye mixed cover RCB, randomized complete block RYL, late-killed pure rye cover RYP, early killed pure rye cover VTL, late-killed vetch cover
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