California Agriculture (Jan 2020)

Cover crop and mulch practices reduce agricultural pollutant loads in stormwater runoff from plastic tunnels

  • Oleg Daugovish,
  • Ben Faber,
  • Eta Takele,
  • Jamie Whiteford,
  • Laosheng Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3733/ca.2020a0004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 74, no. 01
pp. 16 – 22

Abstract

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Macrotunnel production systems contribute over $1 billion to California's economy, but despite increased use, guidance to help macrotunnel growers limit agricultural pollutant loads in rainfall-induced runoff is sparse. Using raspberry as a model crop, we evaluated four runoff management practices during two rainy seasons of the normal 3-year raspberry production cycle: barley cover crop seeded at 500 pounds per acre, weed barrier fabric, yard waste mulch spread 2 to 3 inches thick, and polyacrylamide (PAM). Treatments were applied to 300-foot-by-6-foot-wide post rows. Barley cover crop and mulch reduced combined nitrate and nitrite nitrogen in runoff by 21% to 48% at some runoff events and reduced nitrate nitrogen in soil and leachate to groundwater by 52% to 90%. All treatments reduced turbidity and phosphorus levels in runoff and had 75% to 97% less sediment accumulation compared with bare soil. Additionally, all treatments except PAM reduced weed densities by 48% to 87% compared with bare ground, which reduced the costs of weed management. Barley cover crop had the lowest estimated costs (∼$60.00 per tunnel period), while PAM and mulch were highest (∼$193.00 per tunnel period).

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