
Penn State Uses Airplane to Plant Cover Crops
Seeking to be a role
model for farmers in the state and across the Northeast, Penn State’s
College of Agricultural Sciences undertook aerial seeding of a cover
crop last fall.
Cover crops, such as
the winter wheat Penn State planted, offer great benefits because
their roots prevent soil particles from being washed away by winter
and spring runoff, they lock up carbon, and they take up nutrients
such as nitrogen.
The problem in Pennsylvania
and the Northeast is that crops such as soybeans and corn often
remain in the field until late November, and farmers can’t
get a cover crop planted before cold weather sets in and the growing
season ends. Aerial seeding is a solution to that problem, points
out Glen Cauffman, manager of Penn State farm operations.
“Aerial seeding
allows a cover crop to be planted before an existing crop is harvested,”
he explains. “That way, when the corn or soybeans are cut
and removed and the sunlight gets to the ground, the cover crop
already has a start. Aerial seeding is a very ‘green’
thing to do, and if it were widely practiced in Pennsylvania, it
could have major environmental benefits.”
Although aerial agricultural
applications such as crop dusting are widely practiced in the Midwest
and South, according to Cauffman, they are relatively rare in Pennsylvania.
With the exception of spraying compounds to kill gypsy moth caterpillars,
Keystone State residents rarely see air planes involved in crop
work.
“There are just
a few farms in central Pennsylvania using aerial seeding of cover
crops,” says Gwendolyn Crews, a soil conservationist with
USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service based in Mill
Hall. “We do have some programs that promote planting cover
crops in general, but not aerial seeding. Planting cover crops offers
an environmental benefit by preventing erosion through the winter
and spring, thus reducing the amount of sediment and nutrients,
such as phosphorous, that reach local streams. Aerial seeding is
just a unique way of accomplishing the benefit.”
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