Farm Progress

Managing manure nitrogen with a cover crop

Cover crops might be a tool in the box for livestock producers when it comes to nitrogen management.

July 9, 2018

4 Min Read
Manure injection into an established winter rye cover crop in the fall.University of Minnesota Extension

Source: University of Minnesota Extension

By Les Everett, Education coordinator; Randy Pepin, Extension educator; Jeffrey Coulter, Extension corn agronomist; and Melissa Wilson, Extension specialist - manure management and water quality

Producers who apply liquid manure in the fall might consider use of a cover crop as a nitrogen (N) management tool. Recent on-farm research in Minnesota compared manure management with and without a cover crop.

Liquid swine and dairy manure is frequently applied in the fall, prior to planting corn the following spring. However, corn does not begin taking up substantial amounts of N until mid-June or later. Most of the N in swine manure and about one-half in dairy manure is in the inorganic ammonium form, which can rapidly convert to nitrate by microbial nitrification when soil temperatures are above 50 degrees, in either fall or spring. The remainder of the manure N is in the organic form which is more slowly converted to the ammonium form and later to nitrate. Nitrate does not bind to soil particles and can move in soil water out of the root zone to drainage tile or groundwater. The challenge is how to conserve that nitrogen until the following corn crop can use it.

Winter rye, when planted as a fall cover crop, can take up nitrate in both fall and spring. It is the most reliable cover crop in Minnesota for establishment after corn silage or soybean harvest and is winter hardy. Rye can also prevent soil erosion on sloping soils, especially after low-residue crops like silage corn or soybean. The challenge for farmers is to plant the cover crop as soon as possible before or just after harvest to ensure good establishment, and yet to slow nitrification by delaying manure application until fall soil temperatures decline.

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The same winter rye cover crop plot the following spring. The rye had adequately recovered from the manure injection.

In the 2016 and 2017 growing seasons, 19 on-farm trials across central and southern Minnesota were carried out to determine whether a winter rye cover crop, planted immediately after corn silage or soybean harvest and later injected with liquid dairy or swine, would take up a significant amount of soil nitrate, and, after termination, release it rapidly enough to meet the needs of the subsequent corn crop.

Drilled winter rye and non-cover crop control treatments, replicated three times per site, were established immediately following corn silage or soybean harvest in 2015 and 2016 using field-scale equipment. Later in the fall, liquid dairy or swine manure was injected into the winter rye and non-cover crop control treatments. Rye was terminated by herbicide in the spring before it reached 8 to 10 inches in height in most trials, and was usually tilled in. At termination, rye height, biomass, and N content were measured, along with soil nitrate-N in the 0- to 24-inch layer. Corn was planted at nine sites in 2016 and ten in 2017 after rye termination. Some trials received supplemental N fertilizer at a rate determined by the grower. Corn was harvested as silage or grain, depending on the trial, and measured for yield and N uptake.

  • Results are summarized below. The full report is available at https://z.umn.edu/3k2o. 

  • Rye was successfully established by drilling after corn silage or soybean harvest at all sites, although fall growth was limited at later-planted sites.

  • Survival of rye after manure injection was dependent on how aggressive the injectors were. Injectors or disk covers that disturbed or covered most of the soil surface caused the greatest reduction in rye density, although the rye did recover sufficiently at most sites. The least disturbance occurred with smaller knives, with or without narrowly spaced disk closures.

  • Rye biomass at the time of spring termination was related to how early the rye had been established the preceding fall. The earlier the establishment, the greater the biomass.

  • On all farms, spring soil nitrate-N was greater in the control plots than in the rye plots, indicating that the rye had been effective in taking up nitrate-N remaining from the previous crop and manure.

  • On all farms, there was no significant difference in corn grain or silage yield when following a winter rye cover crop compared to no cover crop.

  • In these trials, the cover crop was terminated at and usually before reaching 12 inches in height and 1 ton/acre of biomass dry matter. In most cases the cover crop was terminated by herbicide and later tilled in. Future research is required to determine the effect of different methods and timings for cover crop termination on performance of the subsequent corn crop.

Originally posted by the University of Minnesota Extension

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