Abstract

Many farms use leguminous cover crops as a nutrient management strategy to reduce their need for nitrogen fertilizer. When they are effective, leguminous cover crops are a valuable tool for sustainable nutrient management. However, the symbiotic partnership between legumes and nitrogen fixing rhizobia is vulnerable to several abiotic and biotic stressors that reduce nitrogen fixation efficiency in real world contexts. Sometimes, despite inoculation with rhizobial strains, this symbiosis fails to form. Such failure was observed in a 14-acre winter cover crop trial in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV) of Texas when three legume species produced no signs of nodulation or nitrogen fixation. This study examined the role of nitrogen, phosphorus, moisture, micronutrients, and native microbial communities in the nodulation of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp) and assessed arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi as an intervention to improve nodulation. Results from two controlled studies confirm moisture and native microbial communities as major factors in nodulation success. Micronutrients showed mixed impacts on nodulation depending on plant stress conditions. Nitrogen and phosphorus deficiencies, however, were not likely causes, nor was mycorrhizal inoculation an effective intervention to improve nodulation. Inoculation method also had a major impact on nodulation rates. Continued research on improved inoculation practices and other ways to maximize nitrogen fixation efficiency will be required to increase successful on-farm implementation.

Highlights

  • Cover cropping is a conservation agriculture practice in which plants are grown for soil health benefits rather than for a harvestable yield [1]

  • All results presented group together the Myc+ and Myc- results for each treatment

  • Leguminous cover crops have great potential to contribute to sustainable nutrient management

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Summary

Introduction

Cover cropping is a conservation agriculture practice in which plants are grown for soil health benefits rather than for a harvestable yield [1]. Interest in cover cropping has burgeoned in recent years and survey data suggest that the number of U.S farmers incorporating the practice and the number of acres covered are both on the rise [2]. Examples of nodulation failure are widespread and have been noted by farmers and researchers [8,9,10]. This problem emerged in our research when, despite rhizobial inoculation, 14 acres of leguminous cover

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