Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions

Abstract Introduction Mechanical termination of crops can negatively affect soil biological, chemical, and structural characteristics. Perennial crops do not require annual termination and can improve these same soil characteristics, which has catalysed interest in the development of new perennial c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jacob Kundert, Manbir Rakkar, Jessica Gutknecht, Jacob Jungers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-03-01
Series:Journal of Sustainable Agriculture and Environment
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/sae2.12094
_version_ 1827302739125731328
author Jacob Kundert
Manbir Rakkar
Jessica Gutknecht
Jacob Jungers
author_facet Jacob Kundert
Manbir Rakkar
Jessica Gutknecht
Jacob Jungers
author_sort Jacob Kundert
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Introduction Mechanical termination of crops can negatively affect soil biological, chemical, and structural characteristics. Perennial crops do not require annual termination and can improve these same soil characteristics, which has catalysed interest in the development of new perennial crops. Advanced lines of the perennial grass intermediate wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium [Host] Barkworth and Dewey; IWG) have been bred for increased seed size and marketed as Kernza® perennial grain, but little is known about how this new crop can be terminated for subsequent annual crop production in rotations that enhance agricultural productivity and environmental sustainability. Materials and Methods Five methods of terminating IWG were tested in Minnesota, USA. Treatments included mechanical tillage using a chisel plow (CHI), undercutter (UND), and disc (DSC), along with no‐till treatments of glyphosate (GLY) and a repeated‐mowing control (CTRL). Treatment effects on IWG mortality, soil carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, bulk density, aggregate stability, soil carbon stocks and soybean yield were measured. Results Daily CO2 fluxes differed by treatment (p < 0.05) on only one of 19 sample dates, and cumulative soil CO2 emissions over the course of the growing season did not differ across treatments. Bulk density decreased relative to baseline in all treatments except CTRL. Aggregate stability remained unchanged in all treatments except CTRL, which increased from the baseline. Soil carbon stocks did not change in any treatment. Soybean yield was highest in GLY but was not significantly different from CHI or UND. Conclusions Soil structure, soil carbon stocks and soil CO2 emissions were unaffected by tillage and no‐till IWG termination treatments. However, tillage followed by preplanting harrowing proved ineffective at terminating IWG and required subsequent summer herbicide applications. Therefore, additional tillage events may be required to fully terminate IWG when herbicide use is prohibited.
first_indexed 2024-04-24T16:51:28Z
format Article
id doaj.art-24747f51428b4a2e9eed8e7aac8ace18
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2767-035X
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-24T16:51:28Z
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Journal of Sustainable Agriculture and Environment
spelling doaj.art-24747f51428b4a2e9eed8e7aac8ace182024-03-29T03:14:36ZengWileyJournal of Sustainable Agriculture and Environment2767-035X2024-03-0131n/an/a10.1002/sae2.12094Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissionsJacob Kundert0Manbir Rakkar1Jessica Gutknecht2Jacob Jungers3Department of Soil, Water, and Climate University of Minnesota Saint Paul Minnesota USASchool of Environment and Natural Resources The Ohio State University Wooster Ohio USADepartment of Soil, Water, and Climate University of Minnesota Saint Paul Minnesota USADepartment of Agronomy and Plant Genetics University of Minnesota Saint Paul Minnesota USAAbstract Introduction Mechanical termination of crops can negatively affect soil biological, chemical, and structural characteristics. Perennial crops do not require annual termination and can improve these same soil characteristics, which has catalysed interest in the development of new perennial crops. Advanced lines of the perennial grass intermediate wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium [Host] Barkworth and Dewey; IWG) have been bred for increased seed size and marketed as Kernza® perennial grain, but little is known about how this new crop can be terminated for subsequent annual crop production in rotations that enhance agricultural productivity and environmental sustainability. Materials and Methods Five methods of terminating IWG were tested in Minnesota, USA. Treatments included mechanical tillage using a chisel plow (CHI), undercutter (UND), and disc (DSC), along with no‐till treatments of glyphosate (GLY) and a repeated‐mowing control (CTRL). Treatment effects on IWG mortality, soil carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, bulk density, aggregate stability, soil carbon stocks and soybean yield were measured. Results Daily CO2 fluxes differed by treatment (p < 0.05) on only one of 19 sample dates, and cumulative soil CO2 emissions over the course of the growing season did not differ across treatments. Bulk density decreased relative to baseline in all treatments except CTRL. Aggregate stability remained unchanged in all treatments except CTRL, which increased from the baseline. Soil carbon stocks did not change in any treatment. Soybean yield was highest in GLY but was not significantly different from CHI or UND. Conclusions Soil structure, soil carbon stocks and soil CO2 emissions were unaffected by tillage and no‐till IWG termination treatments. However, tillage followed by preplanting harrowing proved ineffective at terminating IWG and required subsequent summer herbicide applications. Therefore, additional tillage events may be required to fully terminate IWG when herbicide use is prohibited.https://doi.org/10.1002/sae2.12094greenhouse gas emissionsintermediate wheatgrassKernzasoil healthtillage
spellingShingle Jacob Kundert
Manbir Rakkar
Jessica Gutknecht
Jacob Jungers
Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
Journal of Sustainable Agriculture and Environment
greenhouse gas emissions
intermediate wheatgrass
Kernza
soil health
tillage
title Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
title_full Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
title_fullStr Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
title_short Mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure, carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
title_sort mechanical termination of a perennial grain crop minimally impacts soil structure carbon and carbon dioxide emissions
topic greenhouse gas emissions
intermediate wheatgrass
Kernza
soil health
tillage
url https://doi.org/10.1002/sae2.12094
work_keys_str_mv AT jacobkundert mechanicalterminationofaperennialgraincropminimallyimpactssoilstructurecarbonandcarbondioxideemissions
AT manbirrakkar mechanicalterminationofaperennialgraincropminimallyimpactssoilstructurecarbonandcarbondioxideemissions
AT jessicagutknecht mechanicalterminationofaperennialgraincropminimallyimpactssoilstructurecarbonandcarbondioxideemissions
AT jacobjungers mechanicalterminationofaperennialgraincropminimallyimpactssoilstructurecarbonandcarbondioxideemissions