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CROP PRODUCTION
Unit 7: Tillage & Seeding
Tillage & Seeding (149)
 Tillage – manual or mechanical soil stirring
actions
 Tillage Systems – type and sequence of
tillage operations used for proper
establishment and growth of crops
Goals & Purposes (149)
 Seedbed Preparation – provide optimum
environment for seed germination and
subsequent growth
– Temperature
– Moisture
– Aeration
– Seed-to-soil contact
 Incorporating and mixing – crop residues, lime,
fertilizers, and/or pesticides
 Weed control
 Conservation of soil & water – prevent erosion
conserve precipitation, and improve infiltration
Tillage Vocabulary (150)
 Primary Tillage – inverts or shatters soil 6-14
inches deep; leaves the soil rough
– Loosen and aerate surface layer
– Incorporate fertilizer
– Cover plant residue
 Secondary Tillage – follow primary tillage; depth
is 2-6 inches deep
– Prepare final seed bed
– Level and firm soil
– Pulverizing soil for seed-to-soil
contact
– Control weeds
Tillage Vocabulary (150)
Tillage Implements – vary widely
among engineers,
agronomists, manufacturers,
and producers
Compaction – soil has few or no
pore spaces, creating a poor
environment for plant roots;
measured with a penetrometer
(on right)
Primary Tillage
Implements
 V-ripper
 disk plow
 disk ripper
 sweep plow
 lister/bedder
 moldboard plow
 powered rotary tiller
 chisel plow—combo
Secondary Tillage
Implements
 disk harrow
 roller packer
 field cultivator
 spring- spike- &
tine-tooth harrows
 seed bed finisher
 row-crop cultivator
Tillage Systems (156)
– Conventional tillage: normal primary
and secondary operations – varies
from region to region
– Clean tillage: leave little or no residue
on soil surface
– Mulch tillage: leave residue to reduce
soil/water loss
– Conservation tillage: leave >30%
residue cover on soil surface
– Minimum tillage: systems that employ
the least amount of tillage required
Tillage Systems (Con’t) (156)
– Reduced tillage: utilize fewer or less
energy intensive operations
– Full-width tillage: tillage of entire field
surface
– Strip tillage: tillage of strips, leaving
undisturbed strips
– No-till: seed planted directly into
previously undisturbed soil
– Ridge tillage: ridges/furrows
established & maintained throughout
the year
Tillage Methods (156)
 Clean, full-width tillage systems
– Conventional tillage
– Plow and combined secondary tillage
– Plow and strip-till planting
– Plow, listing, and planting
– Other clean, full width tillage systems
Tillage Methods (159)
 Conservation tillage systems
– Full width conservation tillage
• Chisel plow systems
• Disk (and/or field cultivating) and plant
• Sweep tillage
– Strip till conservation tillage
• Lister-planting
• Strip rotary tillage
• Till-plant
– No till
Tillage Operations for Special
Situations (164)
 Sub-soiling: used to break up
impervious layers which limit
root growth and nutrient and
water holding capacities of the
soil
– Depths greater than 13-14 inches
 Extremely deep primary tillage:
as deep as four feet; turn up soil
that has been buried
Tillage for Weed Control (165)
 Tillage before planting – as
weeds germinate and begin
growth
 Tillage after planting and
before crop emergence is
completed – both weed
control and breaking soil
crusts
 Cultivation after crop
emergence – most
economical and surest
method for weed control
General Considerations (166)
 Agronomic aspects in adopting tillage systems:
– Soil and climatic factors – more crop residues = lower soil
temps and higher OM levels
– Seed and fertilizer placement – heavy residues interfere with
seed placement, covering seed with soil and seed-to-soil
contact; fertilizer may be highly unavailable
– Pest control – reduced tillage systems allow weeds seeds to
remain near surface
– Soil conservation – erosion directly linked to surface residue
 Economic aspects in adopting tillage systems –
primary consideration is net profit over long period of
time
Objectives of Seeding (169)
 Proper depth placement – large seeds have large
food reserves and longer hypocotyl/mesocotyl; in
some soils, moisture is unavailable at shallow
depths
 Good seed-to-soil contact – proper planting
procedure and equipment; proper tillage; avoid
“crusting”
 Proper rate and distribution – germination and
purity; competitive ability; other environmental
factors: canopy, tillering, competition w/other
species
Objectives of Seeding (172)
 Time of planting – late planting can lead to
lower yield
 Row fertilizer placement – side-band, split
boot, and pop-up
Manual Planting (173)
Problems:
– Uneven depth
– Uneven spacing
– Uneven covering of seed
– Excessive soil compaction
Mechanized Planting (173)
Row-crop planters – drill
patterns, hill-drop pattern,
check row pattern
Grain drills
Broadcast seeders –
disadvantages such as uneven
distribution/spacing, poor soil
contact, requires higher
seeding rates
Specialized planters – potato
planters, vegetable seed
planters, and tobacco planters
 Website resouces:
– http://www.wtamu.edu/%7Ecrobinson/TILLAGE/tillag
e.htm
– http://www.deere.com
– http://www.wil-rich.com/
 Chapter 7
– Review Questions (p. 182-184)
– Thinker

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10185253.ppt

  • 1. CROP PRODUCTION Unit 7: Tillage & Seeding
  • 2. Tillage & Seeding (149)  Tillage – manual or mechanical soil stirring actions  Tillage Systems – type and sequence of tillage operations used for proper establishment and growth of crops
  • 3. Goals & Purposes (149)  Seedbed Preparation – provide optimum environment for seed germination and subsequent growth – Temperature – Moisture – Aeration – Seed-to-soil contact  Incorporating and mixing – crop residues, lime, fertilizers, and/or pesticides  Weed control  Conservation of soil & water – prevent erosion conserve precipitation, and improve infiltration
  • 4. Tillage Vocabulary (150)  Primary Tillage – inverts or shatters soil 6-14 inches deep; leaves the soil rough – Loosen and aerate surface layer – Incorporate fertilizer – Cover plant residue  Secondary Tillage – follow primary tillage; depth is 2-6 inches deep – Prepare final seed bed – Level and firm soil – Pulverizing soil for seed-to-soil contact – Control weeds
  • 5. Tillage Vocabulary (150) Tillage Implements – vary widely among engineers, agronomists, manufacturers, and producers Compaction – soil has few or no pore spaces, creating a poor environment for plant roots; measured with a penetrometer (on right)
  • 6. Primary Tillage Implements  V-ripper  disk plow  disk ripper  sweep plow  lister/bedder  moldboard plow  powered rotary tiller  chisel plow—combo
  • 7. Secondary Tillage Implements  disk harrow  roller packer  field cultivator  spring- spike- & tine-tooth harrows  seed bed finisher  row-crop cultivator
  • 8. Tillage Systems (156) – Conventional tillage: normal primary and secondary operations – varies from region to region – Clean tillage: leave little or no residue on soil surface – Mulch tillage: leave residue to reduce soil/water loss – Conservation tillage: leave >30% residue cover on soil surface – Minimum tillage: systems that employ the least amount of tillage required
  • 9. Tillage Systems (Con’t) (156) – Reduced tillage: utilize fewer or less energy intensive operations – Full-width tillage: tillage of entire field surface – Strip tillage: tillage of strips, leaving undisturbed strips – No-till: seed planted directly into previously undisturbed soil – Ridge tillage: ridges/furrows established & maintained throughout the year
  • 10. Tillage Methods (156)  Clean, full-width tillage systems – Conventional tillage – Plow and combined secondary tillage – Plow and strip-till planting – Plow, listing, and planting – Other clean, full width tillage systems
  • 11. Tillage Methods (159)  Conservation tillage systems – Full width conservation tillage • Chisel plow systems • Disk (and/or field cultivating) and plant • Sweep tillage – Strip till conservation tillage • Lister-planting • Strip rotary tillage • Till-plant – No till
  • 12. Tillage Operations for Special Situations (164)  Sub-soiling: used to break up impervious layers which limit root growth and nutrient and water holding capacities of the soil – Depths greater than 13-14 inches  Extremely deep primary tillage: as deep as four feet; turn up soil that has been buried
  • 13. Tillage for Weed Control (165)  Tillage before planting – as weeds germinate and begin growth  Tillage after planting and before crop emergence is completed – both weed control and breaking soil crusts  Cultivation after crop emergence – most economical and surest method for weed control
  • 14. General Considerations (166)  Agronomic aspects in adopting tillage systems: – Soil and climatic factors – more crop residues = lower soil temps and higher OM levels – Seed and fertilizer placement – heavy residues interfere with seed placement, covering seed with soil and seed-to-soil contact; fertilizer may be highly unavailable – Pest control – reduced tillage systems allow weeds seeds to remain near surface – Soil conservation – erosion directly linked to surface residue  Economic aspects in adopting tillage systems – primary consideration is net profit over long period of time
  • 15. Objectives of Seeding (169)  Proper depth placement – large seeds have large food reserves and longer hypocotyl/mesocotyl; in some soils, moisture is unavailable at shallow depths  Good seed-to-soil contact – proper planting procedure and equipment; proper tillage; avoid “crusting”  Proper rate and distribution – germination and purity; competitive ability; other environmental factors: canopy, tillering, competition w/other species
  • 16. Objectives of Seeding (172)  Time of planting – late planting can lead to lower yield  Row fertilizer placement – side-band, split boot, and pop-up
  • 17. Manual Planting (173) Problems: – Uneven depth – Uneven spacing – Uneven covering of seed – Excessive soil compaction
  • 18. Mechanized Planting (173) Row-crop planters – drill patterns, hill-drop pattern, check row pattern Grain drills Broadcast seeders – disadvantages such as uneven distribution/spacing, poor soil contact, requires higher seeding rates Specialized planters – potato planters, vegetable seed planters, and tobacco planters
  • 19.  Website resouces: – http://www.wtamu.edu/%7Ecrobinson/TILLAGE/tillag e.htm – http://www.deere.com – http://www.wil-rich.com/  Chapter 7 – Review Questions (p. 182-184) – Thinker