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Posted 26 November 2003. Crop Management.


Flowering Alfalfa Yields High-Protein Feed on Northern Plains


United States Department of Agriculture.


Washington, D.C., (October 7, 2003) - A species of alfalfa called falcata has been found to thrive on the Northern Plains, where other U.S.-grown varieties fizzle out. The seeds of the yellow-flowering subspecies of the Medicago sativa alfalfa originally came from the Siberian plains.

Scientists in the Agricultural Research Service's Rangeland Resources Research Unit (RRRU) at Cheyenne, Wyo., had long been interested in
interseeding alfalfa with native species on the plains. ARS is the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.

Falcata has a fibrous root system that allows it to compete with
neighboring plant species for limited moisture on rangeland. Other
U.S.-grown alfalfas have a long, main root that burrows deep into soil
to draw water. But 80 percent of native grasses and forbs have shorter
root systems that snatch the available water before it can get down to
deeper roots.

ARS soil scientist Gerald Schuman, with the RRRU's High Plains
Grasslands Research Station, and colleagues have been working with a
rancher who owns 1,500 acres of falcata, land that originally received
the seeds nearly 100 years ago. On the land with falcata, Schuman and
colleagues have found a large increase in forage production--at times
nearly double--compared with rangelands not interseeded with falcata.

Part of the reason for falcata's success is that alfalfa--a legume--brings with it friendly bacteria, called rhizobia, which thrive in nodules on the plant's roots. Rhizobia turn atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can use to promote their own growth. Schuman found that soil where falcata had been interseeded for at least three years had large increases in nitrogen.

Also, the team found evidence that falcata could lower levels of
atmospheric carbon dioxide. They saw increases in soil carbon of more
than five tons per acre on some falcata-interseeded rangeland, when
compared with non-interseeded areas.

Read more on this research in the October issue of Agricultural
Research magazine, available online at:
www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/oct03/alfalfa1003.htm
 

Contact:

Rosalie Marion Bliss
(301) 504-4318
rbliss@ars.usda.gov