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How grass hedges save water on farm

30 Nov, 2009 03:00 AM
Planting grass hedges could be the answer to successfully bringing some United States Conservation Reserve Program land back into production.

Researchers at the Agricultural Research Service have found that grass hedges can help farmers preserve soil and protect water quality by trapping sediment that would otherwise be washed away by field runoff.

Their findings are based on a series of studies conducted 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 per cent slope.

The hedges eventually became a yard wide and were clipped two to three times every year after the grass was 5 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 90pc of eroded sediment from ultra-narrow-row conventionally tilled fields, and only about 50pc of sediment from no-till fields.

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.

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comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
This is really stating the bleeding obvious! See, we don't need an emissions trading tax to reduce pollution and rejuvenate our soils and waterways; just logical, practical solutions. Look at Natural Sequence Farming.
Posted by mbh, 1/12/2009 6:46:52 AM
You needed research to tell you this??
Posted by john, 1/12/2009 7:32:03 AM
I knew of research that had demonstrated this in Qld back in the mid 1990s - is this just reinventing the wheel - nothing new.
Posted by You're joking, 1/12/2009 9:26:27 AM
Nice to have the back up to support what we have been promoting to producers.
Posted by john, 1/12/2009 9:42:24 AM

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