Three Super No-Till Projects

Forty years ago this month, I made my first visit to USDA’s North Appalachian Experimental Watershed in Coshocton, Ohio. Established in 1935, this 1,047-acre facility had been built with depression-era labor from several government assistance programs.

Sadly, the facility was among 259 USDA offices, labs and ag research facilities across the country scheduled for shutdown last year due to federal budget cuts. While a tremendous amount of crop research was conducted over 77 years, three long-term research projects had a tremendous impact on the acceptance of no-till.

40 Years Of No-Till Corn

Among the ongoing projects was a 40-year continuous no-till corn project focusing on rainfall, runoff and erosion. These plots were located on fairly steep, erodible land with an average rainfall of 37.6 inches per year.

Over the years, water runoff averaged only 0.17 inches per acre annually. Yearly soil erosion averaged less than 5 pounds per acre.

Heavy Rains

In 1997, a trial was conducted to compare the impact of a heavy rain on the 40-year no-till corn site. This was compared to corn grown after 1 year of intensive tillage and corn grown on land that had seen 13 years of continuous tillage.

In May of 1997, 2.5 inches of rain was applied in just 1 hour to the plots. Average runoff on the no-till plots was only 0.27 inches of rain, while 0.91 inches of rain ran off the 1-year tillage site and 1.17 inches of rain was lost from the 13-year continuous tillage plot.

No…

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Lessiter frank

Frank Lessiter

Frank Lessiter has served as editor of No-Till Farmer since the publication was launched in November of 1972. Raised on a six-generation Michigan Centennial Farm, he has spent his entire career in agricultural journalism. Lessiter is a dairy science graduate from Michigan State University.

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