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September 2017 Articles

Just Rambling:
Spiritual Corner:
• AgCenter researchers get grant to study cover crops in ene
Managing First-Calf Heifers
Harvey creates problems for Louisiana farmers
Soil tests dig deep to improve plant health
Knock Out roses can be pruned, too
NCBA, PLC on DC Circuit Court Decision on Gray Wolf: "Perfect Example of Need to
NCBA’s Cattlemen to Cattlemen Kicks off New Season
Livestock Producers Encouraged by Report on National Monuments, Urge Swift Actio
Louisiana Forestry Teacher's Tour
AgCenter scientists receive grant to study insect-borne deer, cattle diseases
Poll: Tax Reform Needed for Farmers and America
New Food and Farm Facts Book and Related Products on Sale Now
Reba McEntire Named Farm Bureau Keynote Speaker
LDAF Assisting Harvey Evacuees  Mobile Pet Shelter Deployed
Sweet potato farmers hear about AgCenter research at field day
Louisiana FFA announces new executive leaders
Does Your Horse Have Trouble SWEATING?
Louisiana 4-H’ers place third at national wildlife competition
Louisiana 4-H'ers take third place at national forestry competition
Pasture management, bull selection focus of upcoming beef field day
Crock-Pot Shrimp Jambalaya

(23 articles found)

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AgCenter researchers get grant to study cover crops in ene

AgCenter researchers get grant to study cover crops in energy cane Writer: Rick Bogren at 225-578-5839 or rbogren@agcenter.lsu.edu (08/31/17) BATON ROUGE, La. — A team of LSU AgCenter researchers has received a four-year, $387,000 grant to evaluate the feedstock potential of energy cane and sweet sorghum with winter cover crops. Closely related to sugarcane, energy cane is grown for the production of feedstocks for biofuels and biobased products, said lead scientistBrenda Tubaña. Energy cane produces three crops in four years from one planting. The growing cycle is similar to the pattern farmers use for growing sugarcane. Unlike sugarcane, however, energy cane is harvested for biomass, which is generally done by removing the entire plant, leaving no leaves or other plant materials behind, she said. Growers and scientists are concerned about soil health when the entire biomass of a crop such as energy cane is removed without leaving behind any organic matter to compost and return to the soil the nutrients and chemical compounds to maintain soil health and fertility. To address this concern, AgCenter researchers are planting winter cover crops to protect the bare soil and maintain soil health, Tubaña said. The typical crop cycle begins in August or September when the cane is planted. It will begin to grow in the fall, then go dormant during winter and resume growth in spring. Harvest is the following fall. The cycle continues for two additional crop years, and the field is plowed following the third harvest. It then remains fallow until a new crop is planted late in the following summer. During the fallow period, the soil is vulnerable for loss from wind or erosion, Tubaña said. This is a period for planting a sweet sorghum crop to take advantage of producing an additional crop on the open field. The cover crops are planted following harvest and then chemically “burned down” to eliminate competition with the newly growing cane plants. In addition to winter cover crops between harvests, the research program is also evaluating sweet sorghum as a fallow crop between the final harvest and subsequent replanting the following summer. “The fallow year is a vulnerable time for soil loss, as are the periods during the crop cycle between cane harvest in fall and regrowth the following spring,” Tubana said. The research program is evaluating the economic feasibility of different cover crop strategies, she said. “We expect to deliver an established, well-synchronized cover crop, double-cropping system that can be adopted in the south central region where energy cane and sweet sorghum are the main energy crops to maximize production of biomass,” Tubaña said. The results of the research will be available for sugarcane farmers who want to use cover crops to augment the soil health of their fields, she said. Brenda Tubaña can be reached at (225) 578-9420 or btubana@agcenter.lsu.edu

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