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Northern Research and Demonstration Farm

Tillage Effects on Corn and Soybean Production

Authors: H. Mark Hanna (Iowa State University) , David Rueber (Iowa State University)

  • Tillage Effects on Corn and Soybean Production

    Northern Research and Demonstration Farm

    Tillage Effects on Corn and Soybean Production

    Authors: ,

Abstract

Primary tillage systems differ in their impact on soil and crops as well as the amount of time and resources they require. Tillage may loosen soil, incorporate nutrients, warm or dry soil, manage weeds, bury residue, or level the surface for subsequent operations. Variable soil and weather conditions may result in different decisions about the need for tillage even within similar soil types. A three-year experiment compared corn and soybean yields among subsoil, chisel plow, striptill, and no-till systems on Webster silty clay loam soil.

How to Cite:

Hanna, H. M. & Rueber, D., (2003) “Tillage Effects on Corn and Soybean Production”, Iowa State University Research and Demonstration Farms Progress Reports 2002(1).

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Published on
2003-01-01

Peer Reviewed