Pennycress as a Cash Cover-Crop: Improving the Sustainability of Sweet Corn Production Systems

Commercial sweet corn (<i>Zea mays</i> convar. <i>saccharata</i> var. <i>rugosa</i>) production has a proportionally high potential for nutrient loss to waterways, due to its high nitrogen (N) requirements and low N use efficiency. Cover crops planted after sweet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarah A. Moore, M. Scott Wells, Russ W. Gesch, Roger L. Becker, Carl J. Rosen, Melissa L. Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Agronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/10/5/614
Description
Summary:Commercial sweet corn (<i>Zea mays</i> convar. <i>saccharata</i> var. <i>rugosa</i>) production has a proportionally high potential for nutrient loss to waterways, due to its high nitrogen (N) requirements and low N use efficiency. Cover crops planted after sweet corn can help ameliorate N lost from the field, but farmers are reluctant to utilize cover crops due to a lack of economic incentive. Pennycress (<i>Thlaspi arvense</i> L.) is a winter annual that can provide both economic and environmental benefits. Five N-rates (0, 65, 135, 135 split and 200) were applied pre-plant to sweet corn. After the sweet corn harvest, pennycress was planted into the sweet corn residue with two seeding methods and harvested for seed the following spring. Residual inorganic soil N (N<sub>min</sub>), pennycress biomass, biomass N and yield were measured. The nitrogen rate and seeding method had no effect on pennycress yield, biomass, or biomass N content. The nitrogen rate positively affected N<sub>min</sub> at pennycress seeding, wherein 200N plots had 38–80% higher N<sub>min</sub> than 0N plots, but had no effect on N<sub>min</sub> at pennycress harvest. Control treatments without pennycress had an average of 27–42% greater N<sub>min</sub>. In conclusion, pennycress can act as an effective N catch crop, and produce an adequate seed yield after sweet corn without the need for supplemental fertilization.
ISSN:2073-4395