Michel A. Cavigelli,* John R. Teasdale,
and Anne E. Conklin
Abstract
Despite increasing interest in organic
grain crop production, there is inadequate information
regarding the performance of organically-produced
grain crops in the United States, especially in Coastal
Plain soils of the mid-Atlantic region. We report
on corn (Zea mays L.), soybean [Glycine
max (L.) Merr.], and wheat (Triticum aestivum
L.) yields at the USDA-ARS Beltsville Farming Systems
Project (FSP), a long-term cropping systems trial
established in Maryland in 1996 to evaluate the sustainability
of organic and conventional grain crop production.
Th e fi ve FSP cropping systems include a conventional
no-till corn–soybean– wheat/soybean rotation
(NT), a conventional chisel-till corn–soybean–wheat/soybean
rotation (CT), a 2-yr organic corn–soybean rotation
(Org2), a 3-yr organic corn–soybean–wheat
rotation (Org3), and a 4- to 6-yr organic corn–soybean–wheat–hay
rotation (Org4+). Average corn grain yield during
9 yr was similar in NT and CT (7.88 and 8.03 Mg ha-1,
respectively) but yields in Org2, Org3, and Org4+
were, respectively, 41, 31, and 24% less than in CT.
Low N availability explained, on average, 73% of yield
losses in organic systems relative to CT while weed
competition and plant population explained, on average,
23 and 4%, respectively, of these yield losses. Th
e positive relationship between crop rotation length
and corn yield among organic systems was related to
increasing N availability and decreasing weed abundance
with increasing rotation length. Soybean yield averaged
19% lower in the three organic systems (2.88 Mg ha-1)
than in the conventional systems (3.57 Mg ha-1)
and weed competition alone accounted for this diff
erence. Th ere were no consistent diff erences in
wheat yield among cropping systems. Crop rotation
length and complexity had little impact on soybean
and wheat yields among organic systems. Results indicate
that supplying adequate N for corn and controlling
weeds in both corn and soybean are the biggest challenges
to achieving equivalent yields between organic and
conventional cropping systems.
Keywords: organic
systems, FSP,Agronomic Performance,Conventional Field
Crops, Zea mays L.,Glycine max,Triticum
aestivum L., Organis
farming.