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Research Project: RANGELAND AND LIVESTOCK RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

Location: Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory

Title: Crop and livestock enterprise integration: Livestock impacts on forage, stover, and grain production

Authors
item Tanaka, Donald
item Scholljegerdes, Eric -
item Liebig, Mark
item Kronberg, Scott

Submitted to: ASA-CSSA-SSSA Annual Meeting Abstracts
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: July 21, 2011
Publication Date: October 16, 2011
Citation: Tanaka, D.L., Scholljegerdes, E., Liebig, M.A., Kronberg, S.L. 2011. Crop and livestock enterprise integration: Livestock impacts on forage, stover, and grain production. ASA-CSSA-SSSA Annual Meeting Abstracts. Paper 65100. Available: http://scisoc.confex.com/scisoc/2011am/webprogram/Paper65100.html

Technical Abstract: Enterprise diversity is the key to ensure productive and sustainable agriculture for the future. Integration of crops and livestock enterprises is one way to improve agricultural sustainability, and take advantage of beneficial enterprise synergistic effects. Our objectives were to develop cropping systems, including cover crops, which provide forage, stover, and grain for bred cows during the late fall and over-winter period (late September through December) and determine livestock impacts on following forage, stover, and grain production in the northern Great Plains. A three-year cropping system that included 1) oats, with a cover crop of alfalfa/hairy vetch/red clover, 2) sorghum x sudan, with a cover crop of sweet clover and red clover, 3) corn harvested for grain. Experiment was initiated in 2006 with 2007 as the first year of crop data collection. All phases of the crop sequence were present each year and all crops were no-till seeded. Treatments for each crop were forage or stover left in place (IP), forage or stover removed (R) both with no livestock grazing, and all forage or stover grazed by livestock (L). For oats and sorghum x sudan, the R and L treatments had forage production and precipitation use efficiencies that were similar to the IP treatment. For.corn, the L treatment produced 11.5% more grain and 17.6% more stover than the IP treatment. In no-till integrated crop/livestock systems for the northern Great Plains, livestock grazing does not appear to reduce forage, stover, or grain production. Therefore, agriculture production systems that contain enterprise diversity have the potential to improve sustainability through crop and livestock production.

   

 
Project Team
Kronberg, Scott
Archer, David
Sanderson, Matt
Hendrickson, John
Liebig, Mark
Nichols, Kristine
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Climate Change, Soils, and Emissions (212)
  Pasture, Forage and Rangeland Systems (215)
 
 
Last Modified: 05/26/2013
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