Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona
Herbaceous wind barriers are tall grasses or other non-woody plants established in narrow strips spaced across the field perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction. They are used on cropland to protect soils and crops from damaging effects of wind and wind-borne soil particles. They should also...
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College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
2008
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2036362015-10-23T04:47:48Z Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona Munda, Bruce Walther, Don Briggs, Jim Ottman, Michael J. Agriculture -- Arizona Grain -- Arizona Forage plants -- Arizona Sorghum -- Arizona Corn -- Arizona Sorghum -- Wind barriers Corn -- Wind barriers Herbaceous wind barriers are tall grasses or other non-woody plants established in narrow strips spaced across the field perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction. They are used on cropland to protect soils and crops from damaging effects of wind and wind-borne soil particles. They should also provide food and cover for wildlife. In Arizona, there is a need to identify herbaceous plants, commonly used for crops, which are effective in controlling soil erosion caused by wind on cropland. This trial was conducted at the Tucson Plant Materials Center and is composed of three hybrid grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench ssp. bicolor) types (‘SG-677’, ‘DS9300’, and ‘KS-735’), one forage sorghum (‘NK300’), one silage corn (Zea mays L.) type (‘N91-19’), and two grain corn types (‘Mexican June’ & ‘DX-93’). All sorghum types had good height, excellent retention of upright foliage, and excellent second year sprouting. It is apparent that sorghum can be a multi-year herbaceous wind barrier and when established will require minimal amounts of irrigation water to keep it growing and functioning as a multi-year herbaceous wind barrier. The two best performers for the sorghum varieties are ‘KS-735’ and ‘SG-677’. This information can be applied to the conservation practices such as Herbaceous Wind Barrier (603) and Cross-Wind Trap Strips (589C). 2008-10 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/203636 Forage and Grain: A College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Report en_US AZ1459 Series P-156 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) |
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NDLTD |
language |
en_US |
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topic |
Agriculture -- Arizona Grain -- Arizona Forage plants -- Arizona Sorghum -- Arizona Corn -- Arizona Sorghum -- Wind barriers Corn -- Wind barriers |
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Agriculture -- Arizona Grain -- Arizona Forage plants -- Arizona Sorghum -- Arizona Corn -- Arizona Sorghum -- Wind barriers Corn -- Wind barriers Munda, Bruce Walther, Don Briggs, Jim Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona |
description |
Herbaceous wind barriers are tall grasses or other non-woody plants established in narrow strips spaced across the field perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction. They are used on cropland to protect soils and crops from damaging effects of wind and wind-borne soil particles. They should also provide food and cover for wildlife. In Arizona, there is a need to identify herbaceous plants, commonly used for crops, which are effective in controlling soil erosion caused by wind on cropland. This trial was conducted at the Tucson Plant Materials Center and is composed of three hybrid grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench ssp. bicolor) types (‘SG-677’, ‘DS9300’, and ‘KS-735’), one forage sorghum (‘NK300’), one silage corn (Zea mays L.) type (‘N91-19’), and two grain corn types (‘Mexican June’ & ‘DX-93’). All sorghum types had good height, excellent retention of upright foliage, and excellent second year sprouting. It is apparent that sorghum can be a multi-year herbaceous wind barrier and when established will require minimal amounts of irrigation water to keep it growing and functioning as a multi-year herbaceous wind barrier. The two best performers for the sorghum varieties are ‘KS-735’ and ‘SG-677’. This information can be applied to the conservation practices such as Herbaceous Wind Barrier (603) and Cross-Wind Trap Strips (589C). |
author2 |
Ottman, Michael J. |
author_facet |
Ottman, Michael J. Munda, Bruce Walther, Don Briggs, Jim |
author |
Munda, Bruce Walther, Don Briggs, Jim |
author_sort |
Munda, Bruce |
title |
Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona |
title_short |
Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona |
title_full |
Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona |
title_fullStr |
Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona |
title_full_unstemmed |
Herbaceous Wind Barriers for Irrigated Lands in Arizona |
title_sort |
herbaceous wind barriers for irrigated lands in arizona |
publisher |
College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/203636 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mundabruce herbaceouswindbarriersforirrigatedlandsinarizona AT waltherdon herbaceouswindbarriersforirrigatedlandsinarizona AT briggsjim herbaceouswindbarriersforirrigatedlandsinarizona |
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