Winter rye cover crops offer multiple benefits, including carbon
sequestration. (Photo by Tom Kasper, D3362-1)
Rye the Right Crop for "Nabbing" Nitrates, Capturing Carbon and
Generating Bioenergy
For media inquiries contact: Jan
Suszkiw, (202) 734-1176
August 10, 2023
Winter rye is prized for its versatility. It is a source of grain
and also a forage and ground cover that protects the soil from
erosion by wind and rain. But the benefits of winter rye don’t
stop there.
A series of studies, begun in 2015, by a team of Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) and university collaborators suggest that
establishing a cover crop of winter rye between rotations of corn
and soybean can reduce nitrate losses, sequester carbon, and
provide a source of renewable natural gas.
Robert Malone, an agricultural engineer with the ARS National
Laboratory for Agriculture and the Environment in Ames,
Iowa, is coordinating the studies to evaluate rye’s potential role
in the "sustainable intensification of agriculture"—an approach
deemed critical to meeting growing world demand for food, feed,
fiber, and fuel without overtaxing what the land and natural
resources can provide.
In the latest studies, the team used a field-scale computer model
to simulate rotations of corn and soybean, with or without winter
rye cover crops, at 40 sites across the North Central United
States, including parts of the Mississippi River Basin, which
empties into the Gulf of Mexico.
Among results recently published in the journal of Environmental
Research Letters:
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Establishing a winter rye cover crop between corn-soybean
rotations in tile-drained fields (meaning, those using a system
of underground drainage pipes to remove excess water) reduced
nitrate levels in drainage water by more than 45 percent
compared to rye-free fields—or about 21 and 44 kilograms per
hectare, respectively.
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Across the 63-total million hectares (approximately 156 million
acres) of North Central farmland that the model’s simulations
encompassed, use of a winter rye cover crops on tile-drained
fields translated to a 27 percent reduction in nitrate loads
entering the Gulf of Mexico via the Mississippi River basin.
Nitrate poses an environmental concern when it goes unused by crop
plants and escapes into streams, river, lakes and other bodies of
surface water, compromising water quality and helping fuel algal
blooms. The subsequent death and decay of the algae in these
blooms consumes oxygen, killing or driving off fish and other
aquatic life.
In coastal waters like the Gulf of Mexico, this condition is known
as hypoxia, and it creates a "dead zone" spanning several thousand
square miles, a size that can exact a costly toll on commercial
fisheries and other associated industries. This summer, for
example, the Gulf’s dead zone is forecasted to
cover 4,155 square miles.
"A variety of factors—including the effects of excess nutrients
and water-body stratification (layering) due to saline or
temperature gradients—can create hypoxic conditions. In North
America, the size of the hypoxic area in the Gulf of Mexico
correlates strongly with spring nitrate-nitrogen loads from the
Mississippi River," explained Malone, who collaborates on the
modelling studies with 15 other researchers from three ARS
laboratories and four universities.
Climate-change may increase the likelihood of hypoxic conditions
in the Gulf of Mexico, lending urgency to U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency task
force efforts to reduce nitrogen and phosphorous loads
from the Mississippi River basin by 45 percent by 2035.
"The use of cover crops such as winter rye in corn-soybean
rotations in the North-Central U.S. is one of the most promising
conservation strategies for reducing nitrate loads to streams and
rivers that discharge into the Mississippi River," according to
Malone.
In addition to curbing nitrate losses, winter rye cover crops may
also have a role to play in capturing (or, "sequestering") carbon.
According to the model’s simulations, establishing winter rye
cover crops in corn-soybean rotations across the North Central
U.S. could produce more than 18 million metric tonnes (19.8
million tons) of field residue, called "biomass." That rye
residue, in turn, has potential to yield 210 million megajoules of
energy annually—the equivalent energy content of 2.3 billion
gallons of ethanol—were it to be converted into bio-methane gas
using anaerobic digesters.
The simulations also indicate that in the bio-methane production
process, a standard filtration step called "upgrading"
could enable the removal and capture 7.5 million tonnes (8.3
million tons) annually of carbon dioxide, preventing its release
back into the atmosphere when the biogas is burned for power or
heat and creating a carbon sequestration benefit for farmers.
The researchers don’t view winter rye cover crops as a proverbial
"magic bullet" for managing nitrogen and improving the
environment, however. Rather, it’s likely to be integrated with
other measures, including the use of saturated riparian buffers,
controlled drainage, wetlands and bioreactors.
"Combined conservation practices such as winter rye cover crops
and edge-of-field practices like using the saturated buffers are
sometimes called 'stacked practices,' and they may reduce nitrogen
loss more than when each practice is used individually," said
Malone.
Along with colleagues in Ames, Malone co-authored the Environmental
Research Letters paper
together with scientists from the ARS Soil and Water Management
Research Unit, the ARS Arid-Land Agricultural Research Center,
Pennsylvania State University, Iowa State University, McGill
University and Purdue University.
The Agricultural
Research Service is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific in-house research agency. Daily,
ARS focuses on solutions to agricultural problems affecting
America. Each dollar invested in U.S. agricultural research
results in $20 of economic impact. |