A Hedge with an Edge for Erosion Control
|
|
Category: AgricultureType: News
Source: USDA Agriculture Research Service
Date: Friday, August 21st, 2009
One way farmers can preserve soil and protect water quality is by planting grass hedges to trap sediment that would otherwise be washed away by field runoff. Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists at the agency's National Sedimentation Lab in Oxford, Miss., have calculated how much soil erosion these hedges prevent and verified predictions of the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation version two (RUSLE2).
Agronomist Seth Dabney, hydrologist Glenn Wilson and agricultural engineer Robert Cullum collaborated with retired agricultural engineer Keith McGregor in a series of studies over 13 years to assess the effectiveness of grass hedges for erosion control in wide or ultra-narrow-row conventional tillage or no-till cotton systems.
The researchers established single-row continuous swaths of miscanthus, a tall perennial grass, across the lower ends of 72-foot-long plots with a five percent slope. Then they tracked how much sediment was trapped by the vegetation from both the wide and ultra-narrow-row conventional tillage and no-till fields. The hedges eventually became a yard wide and were clipped 2 to 3 times every year after the grass was five to 6.5 feet tall.
The scientists found that the ability of the hedges to trap sediment increased as the hedges matured. The hedges were more effective at intercepting sediments that washed out of conventionally tilled fields, possibly because the eroded materials from no-till fields were composed of smaller particles.
The hedges captured approximately 90 percent of eroded sediment from ultra-narrow-row conventionally tilled fields, and only about 50 percent of sediment from no-till fields. Nevertheless, the actual soil loss from the no-till plots-either with or without grass hedges-was much less than the conventionally tilled plots with or without grass hedges, because no-till production helps mitigate erosion.
The team also found that hedge effectiveness was enhanced when clippings were allowed to accumulate uphill of the hedges. But even if all the clippings from grass hedges over 1.5 feet tall are removed for livestock feed or bioenergy production, the hedges can still help protect against field erosion. Hedges could be especially valuable if highly erodible lands in the U.S.D.A. (USDA) Conservation Reserve Plan are brought back into production.
Results from this study were published in the Soil Science Society of America Journal.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of USDA.
There are currently no comments for this story. Be the first to
add a comment!
Click here to add a comment about this story.
Careful Sleuthing Reveals a Key Source of Sedimentation
Much of the Mississippi River's sediment load doesn't come from field runoff, according to work by scientists at the U.S.D.A. (USDA). Instead, the scientists with USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS) have confirmed ...
Grass Strips Help Curb Erosion, Herbicide Transport
... can reduce herbicide transport through trapping of sediment and by increased infiltration of water into the soil. Read more about the research in the January 2009 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. ARS is ...
Careful Land Management Protects Mississippi Watersheds
... edge-of-field sites and developed vegetated buffer zones and slotted inlet pipes to slow water flow and trap agricultural chemicals and sediments in field runoff. The researchers found that Beasley Lake has improved in ...
Scientists Meet to Tackle Gully Erosion Issue
... the impact of agricultural practices. Its research also encompasses studies on in-stream structures, bank protection, water quality and the ecological well-being of streams. ARS is the U.S.D.A. 's chief scientific research agency. ...
Device to Gauge Erodibility of Soil Can Aid Watershed Planners
... as in ARS efforts to understand, predict and control soil erosion and sedimentation within the nation's streams and lakes. The ... Category: Agriculture Type: News Source: USDA Agriculture Research Service Date: Monday, June 9th, 2003 ...
Better Way To Deal With Cattle Runoff
... from cattle waste runoff is only one advantage of a new, environmentally friendly system developed by Agricultural Research Service ... than letting them wash away to nearby streams or other bodies of water. In the 3 years that agricultural engineers have ...
Ditches--A Simple, Inexpensive Way to Enhance Surface Water Quality
... They carry runoff water from fields following storm events or controlled water delivers in the case of rice fields. Agricultural Research Service scientists Matt Moore, Sammie Smith and Charlie Cooper at ...
Researchers, Farmers Team Up To Revive Mississippi Lakes
... MSEA plan is designed to test and develop farming methods that will work with nature to protect water quality. "Part of MSEA's success is making farmers research partners in finding out what works," said I. ...
ARS Presents Awards for Delivering New Research to Market
... They are being acknowledged for developing and transferring technology to use a substance called polyacrylamide (PAM) to reduce soil erosion in furrow-irrigated fields. The ARS scientists have shown that adding PAM to ...
Model Provides Major Advance in Controlling Water Erosion
... said C. Richard Amerman, national plan leader for soil erosion at USDA's Agricultural Research Service in Beltsville, Md. WEPP is a ... role in developing and testing the erosion prediction technology at the ARS National Soil Erosion Research Lab at West ...