Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T20:27:03.428Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An integrated approach to crop/livestock systems: Forage and grain production for swath grazing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2007

D.L. Tanaka*
Affiliation:
USDA-ARS, Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory, PO Box 459, Mandan, ND 58554, USA
J.F. Karn
Affiliation:
USDA-ARS, Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory, PO Box 459, Mandan, ND 58554, USA
M.A. Liebig
Affiliation:
USDA-ARS, Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory, PO Box 459, Mandan, ND 58554, USA
S.L. Kronberg
Affiliation:
USDA-ARS, Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory, PO Box 459, Mandan, ND 58554, USA
J.D. Hanson
Affiliation:
USDA-ARS, Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory, PO Box 459, Mandan, ND 58554, USA
*
*Corresponding author: tanakad@mandan.ars.usda.gov

Abstract

Current agricultural systems are the result of decoupling crop/livestock enterprises for short-term economic gain at the expense of long-term sustainability. Objectives of our research were to determine the influences of winter grazing dry gestating beef cows on no-till forage and grain production, water-use efficiency, and protein and phosphorus (P) production for an oat/pea–triticale/sweet clover–corn 3-year cropping system. Oat/pea and triticale crops were harvested for grain, with the straw and chaff left in swaths after harvest for winter grazing. Drilled corn for forage was swathed in late September. Cropping system treatments were: (1) straw and corn chopped and left in place (IP); (2) straw and corn baled and removed without livestock (R); and (3) straw and corn swath grazed by livestock (L). The first winter for grazing dry, bred cows was in 1999–2000; therefore, no treatment differences occurred for the 1999 crop. In 2000, oat/pea and triticale grain and straw production for the IP treatment was about half of the production for the R treatment, because of low oat/pea and triticale plant stands on the IP treatment. Averaged over all years, corn was about 1.5 times more efficient in using water for dry matter production when compared to oat/pea or triticale. Generally, protein and P production, on a unit area basis, were highest for corn and lowest for triticale. Averaged over 4 years, about half of the nitrogen used for protein production was derived from sources other than applied commercial fertilizer. Data suggest that more than 4 years of research are needed to understand cropping system and animal interactions on forage and grain production in integrated crop/livestock systems, with trends in year four suggesting that livestock may enhance forage and grain production.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1Kirschenmann, F. 2002. Why American agriculture is not sustainable. Renewable Research Journal 20: 611Google Scholar
2Hardesty, L.H. and Tiedeman, J.A 1996. Integrating crop and livestock production in Inland Northwest farming systems. American Journal of Alternative Agriculture 11: 121126CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3Brummer, C.E. 1998. Diversity, stability, and sustainability. American Agriculture. Agronomy Journal 90: 12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4Hesterman, O.B. and Thorburn, T.L. 1994. A comprehensive approach to sustainable agriculture: W. K. Kellogg's integrated farming systems initiative. Journal of Production Agriculture 7: 132134CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5Hildebrand, P.E. 1990. Agronomy's role in sustainable agriculture: Integrated farming systems. Journal of Production Agriculture 3: 285288CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6Luna, J., Allen, V., Fontenot, J., Daniels, L., Vaughan, D., Hagood, S., Taylor, D. and Laub, C. 1994. Whole farm systems research: An integrated crop and livestock systems comparison study. American Journal of Alternative Agriculture 9: 5763CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7Powell, J.M., Fernández-Rivera, S., Hienaux, P. and Turner, M.D. 1996. Agricultural Systems 52: 143170CrossRefGoogle Scholar
8Tilman, D., Reich, P.B., Knops, J., Wedin, D., Mielke, T. and Lehman, C. 2001. Diversity and productivity in long-term grassland experiment. Science 294: 843845CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9McCartney, D 1996. Research summary of swath grazing. Western Forage/Beef Group, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Lacombe, AlbertaGoogle Scholar
10 Anonymous 1998. An introduction to swath grazing in western Canada. Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Agdex. 420/56-1.Google Scholar
11Klein, L 1996. Winter swath grazing. Grazing and Pasture Technology Program, Regina SaskatchewanGoogle Scholar
12Littell, R.C., Milliken, G.A., Stroup, W.W. and Wolfinger, R.D 1996. SAS system for mixed models. SAS Institute Inc. Cary, NCGoogle Scholar
13Parkinson, J.A. and Allen, S.E. 1975. A wet oxidation procedure suitable for the determination of nitrogen and mineral nutrients in biological material. Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis 6: 111CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14Bowman, R.A. 1989. A rapid plant digestion method for analysis of P and certain cations by inductively coupled plasma spectrometry. Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis 20: 539553CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15Tanaka, D.L. 1990. Topsoil removal influences on spring wheat water-use efficiency and nutrient concentration and content. Transactions of the ASAE 33: 15181524CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16Karsli, M.A., Russell, J.R. and Hersom, M.J. 1999. Evaluation of berseem clover in diets of ruminants consuming corn crop residues. Journal of Animal Science 77: 28732882CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
17NRC 1996. Nutrient Requirements of Domestic Animals. Nutrient Requirements of Beef Cattle 7th ed. National Academy of Science, Washington, DCGoogle Scholar