Read the
magazine
story to find out more.
|

A combination of conservation tillage and deficit
irrigation management can save peanut farmers water without cutting yields,
according to new ARS research. Photo courtesy of Kathy Gray, ARS.
|

|
New Farming Wrinkle May Help Peanut Growers
By Sharon
Durham
January 14, 2010 Using a combination of conservation
tillage and deficit irrigation management in peanut production can promote
conservation of water during the early growing season without hurting yields,
an Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientist reports.
That's good news for peanut farmers in the Southern High Plains, where water
is often in short supply, particularly in areas where residential development
has increased demands for water. Irrigation also adds to the cost of production
for growers.
Deficit irrigation, or forced drought, early in the growing season appears
to result in quicker maturation while maintaining yields, according to ARS
agronomist
Wilson
Faircloth at the
National
Peanut Research Laboratory (NPRL) in Dawson, Ga., and plant physiologist
Diane Rowland, formerly with NPRL and now with Texas A&M University. They conducted a
five-year field trial in West Texas to determine the effects of deficit
irrigation. More recently, they've also studied how conservation tillage can
help boost peanut production.
Results indicate that induced early-season drought may serve to acclimate
the crop to drought stress that commonly occurs during late-season growth,
according to Faircloth. It is also during this latter part of the growing
season that growers typically experience water deficits due to reduced pumping
capacity, thus increasing the risk of yield reductions.
Faircloth and Rowland also investigated the use of conservation tillage with
a cover crop to mitigate drought. They applied varying amounts of water to
peanut and cotton planted in either conservation or conventional tillage. They
found that, under drought conditions, conservation tillage increased peanut
yields when compared to conventional tillage. The yield increase was attributed
to increased water-holding capacity of the soil under conservation tillage, and
changes in peanut rooting patterns.
Additionally, the combination of conservation tillage and deficit irrigation
could greatly reduce water requirements for peanut and cotton.
Read
more about this and related research to improve peanut production in the
January 2010 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The
research supports the USDA priorities of promoting international food security
and responding to climate change.