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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June
25, 2003
Contact:
Anusuya Rangarajan; phone:
607-255-1780
Cornell to Take
'Reduced-Till' Technologies to Small Growers in the Northeast
By Mary Woodsen
ITHACA, NY: Anusuya Rangarajan, assistant
professor of horticulture at Cornell University, recently received
a $150,000, three-year grant to develop and teach ways of improving
soil quality while protecting rivers, lakes, and streams from the
runoff of northeastern vegetable farms.
"Conservation tillage"-often called
"no-till"-has become an established routine for farmers in many
parts of North America. No-till keeps organic matter from last season's
crops near the surface, which means that rainfall generally penetrates
more easily and crop residues break down to enrich the soil. Equally
important, no-till reduces soil compaction-a condition that can
starve plant roots of necessary oxygen while inhibiting the movement
of water through the soil.
But it's not easy to pull off no-till
in the relatively cool climate of the Northeast. Crop residues at
the surface may reflect warming sunshine away from the soil, so
that some crops-melons or peppers, for example-don't have the chance
to take hold and mature during the short northern growing season.
Rangarajan, along with a team of growers,
Cooperative Extension educators, and researchers from around the
Northeast, will develop and test several "reduced tillage" modifications
of classic no-till techniques: modifications that should help the
soil warm more quickly in the spring. They'll be working with the
Residue Saver, a device developed at Cornell University that picks
up crop residues ahead of a tiller, then drops them behind the implement-a
sort of "mulch as you go" device that helps suppress weeds and cut
down on erosion.
"We want to develop tools and techniques
that will work for small growers, for the people who have only a
40- or 50-horsepower tractor," says Rangarajan. "The growers that
have hundreds or even over a thousand acres can buy good reduced-tillage
equipment that meets their needs. It'll be an achievement just to
get the equipment right for those small farmers in the Northeast
who don't have those options now."
Curtis Petzoldt, vegetable coordinator
of the New York State Integrated Pest Management Program, is one
of the scientists working with Rangarajan. "We anticipate learning
better ways to build healthy soils," he says. "When you till less,
yet incorporate more organic matter, your soils tend to have better
structure and higher levels of beneficial microorganisms. This translates
into a lower risk of root diseases and generally healthier crops
that are better able to resist pests."
Rangarajan's project relies heavily
on farmers who already have incorporated some aspect of no-till
practice into their operations. They will consult with scientists
on designing and evaluating the research, host field days at on-farm
research plots, speak at workshops, and help new farmers who will
be testing these reduced tillage systems.
The Sustainable Agriculture Research
and Education program (United States Department of Agriculture)
has funded Rangarajan's research.
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