IAMP-Cover Crop Practice (NRCS Code 340)

Practice Summary Table

Description

A seasonal/annual vegetative cover that is not harvested, baled, or sold as a specific commodity other than grazing. See NRCS Cover Crop (340) guide as a reference. Cover crops may be established between successive production crops or companion-planted or relay-planted into production crops. Select species and planting dates that will not compete with the production purpose(s).

Benefits

Reduce erosion, improve soil health, increase soil organic matter, reduce off-site losses and availability of easily transported nutrients, suppress excessive weed pressures and break pest cycles, improve infiltration, soil moisture efficiency, minimize soil compaction.

Soil Carbon Impacts

Depending upon the overall growth, type of vegetation, and management will result in increased soil carbon. The permanence of the increased soil carbon depends on the frequency of cover crops in a particular crop rotation.

Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Impacts

Increased conversion of inorganic forms of nitrogen can lead to increased nitrogen use efficiency resulting in decreased N2O emissions. Depending upon type and amount of carbon, CO2 production could increase as microbial driven decomposition of labile forms of carbon leads to increased respiration.

Considerations for Success

IAMP Preferences/Considerations

The IAMP project incentivizes practices that result in a net reduction in GHG and increase in soil carbon. Ideal cover crops have a high C/N ratio, maximize total biomass, are planted early/harvested late (e.g. winter cover crops preferable), have high nitrate uptake/conversion to biomass, are included in the rotation 1 out of three years. Avoid removal of cover crop by baling, avoid fertilizing cover crop unless the increase in biomass justifies the risk of increased N2O emissions.

Specific Details

Criteria/Verification

Incentive Payments

$74/acre/year, for the years that the cover crop is planted.

Stacking or Companion Practices

The cover crop practice is compatible with Biochar, Conservation crop rotation (>2 crops), Intercropping, No tillage from conventional, Reduced tillage from conventional, Nutrient Management (Basic, Enhanced and Precision), Prescribed grazing, Soil Carbon amendment. We encourage growers to explore grazing of cover crops as a stacked practice. Growers could also convert a cereal crop to a legume or inter-seeded cropping practice in alternative years. Nutrient management practices which replace synthetic fertilizers with compost or manure is another option. Reduced tillage and biochar practices would also be good options. It is recommended to account for soil nitrogen gains resulting from cover crops when calculating next year’s fertilizer needs.

Sources

Additional Resources