Abstract

Winter cover crops might reduce nutrient loss to leaching in the Upper Midwest. New oilseed-bearing cash cover crops, such as winter camelina ( L.) and pennycress ( L.), may provide needed incentives. However, the abilities of these crops to sequester labile soil nutrients are unknown. To address this unknown, N in shoot biomass, plant-available N and P in soil, and NO-N and soluble reactive P in soil water collected from lysimeters placed at 30, 60, and 100 cm were measured in cover crop and fallow treatments established in spring wheat ( L.) stubble and followed through a cover crop-soybean [ (L.) Merr.] rotation. Five no-till cover treatments (forage radish [ L.], winter rye [ L.], field pennycress, and winter camelina) were compared with two fallow treatments (chisel till and no-till). Pennycress and winter camelina were harvested at maturity after relay sowing of soybean. Winter rye and radish sequestered more N in autumn shoot biomass, ranging from 26 to 38 kg N ha, but overwintering oilseeds matched or exceeded N uptake in spring, ranging 28 to 49 kg N ha before soybean planting. Nitrogen uptake was reflected by reductions in soil water NO-N during cover crop and intercropping phases for all cover treatments (mean = 4 mg L), compared with fallow treatments (mean = 31 mg L). Cash cover crops like pennycress and winter camelina provide both environmental and potential economic resources to growers. They are cash-generating crops able to sequester labile soil nutrients, which protects and promotes soil health from autumn through early summer.

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