Important results from crop rotation study

4 October 2024

Agriculture Victoria’s long-term cropping research in the Victorian Mallee is unearthing important results which could impact agricultural land management in the region.

Agriculture Victoria Senior Research Scientist Professor Roger Armstrong said the research trial ‘MC14’, established at Walpeup in 1985, looks at the impact of different types of crop management on soil Carbon (C) and Nitrogen (N) stocks.

Professor Armstrong said the research has been testing 3 different crop rotation treatments – legume/wheat, legume/fallow/wheat and fallow/wheat, using either mechanical cultivation or direct drilling stubble management practices.

‘The standout treatment was the legume/fallow/wheat in terms of the significant productivity benefits of additional moisture and nitrogen added to the subsequent crop.

‘However, this needs to be balanced with the finding of nitrate leaching, as well as a reduction in the accumulation of soil carbon compared to the other continuous rotations,’ he said.

Professor Armstrong said in the early years of the trial, the legume in the rotation was medic, a low-growing clover-like annual, but it’s now vetch, in keeping with modern farming practices.

‘Cropping farmers know that adding a legume into the rotation increases N in the soil.

‘When an annual legume phase is included in the rotation, we have recorded not only good grain yield responses but also large amounts of soil nitrate, a valuable commodity in low rainfall Mallee cropping zone,’ he said.

‘Most notably the amount of soil nitrate is greater in the crop rotations that exclude a fallow period.’

Professor Armstrong said the legume/wheat treatment has increased N in the soil by 21% compared to the legume/fallow/wheat treatment, which recorded 15% more N in the soil.

‘Another critical observation from the long-term trial is that fallowing (as opposed to maintaining continuous plant cover) resulted in a decline in soil carbon.’

He said the results suggest that whereas fallowing can produce short term benefits to productivity in terms of soil water and mineral N accumulation, it comes at the expense of a critical soil resource – organic carbon.

The study also highlights the value of trials such as MC14 in assessing the impact of different management practices on long-term productivity and agricultural sustainability.

Professor Armstrong said adopting a direct drilling approach can help minimise the reduction in soil carbon, but it will not completely stop its decline.

Media contact: Mel Curtis

Phone: 0402 001 853