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South Dakota - Nutrient Management, Organic Farming, Wetlands
Within an hour to an hour and a half after a big rain, 4,000 acres drain onto
one part of the Johnson farm. After a major rain, the water will flood from 5 to
20 acres--and stay just long enough to kill the crop and leave silt. So, the
Johnsons have replaced their crops with a grassed waterway of 10 to 15 acres.
Charlie Johnson farms 1,800 acres in Madison with his brother, Allan. About
1,050 to 1,100 acres are in cropland with the rest in pasture, permanent
pasture, sloughs, wetlands, waste ground, and buildings. The farm drains into
the East Fork of Vermillion River and into the Big Sioux, which flows into the
Missouri and the Mississippi rivers. Eighty-five acres of the home farm--three
sloughs and 35 acres of permanent water that Johnson calls "a lake really,
with clear, pristine water"--are under Water Bank Program contracts. When
those contracts end, Johnson plans to fence a small area around the buffer strip
around the water "and leave it permanently for wildlife. In the upland
area, we'll leave it for the birds through the summer, and after the birds are
done, in early fall we'd like to bring the cattle back to our home place for
some nice fresh pasture."
Chuck Lebeda, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) District
Conservationist in Lake County, says some of those acres may be eligible for the
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) when they come out of the Water
Bank--"but even if they are not, we'll still get the natural resource
benefit."
The Johnsons' farm has been organic since their father converted it in the
mid-1970s. No herbicides or commercial fertilizers are used. Insects are
controlled by the long, six-year rotations: alfalfa and hay the first two years,
soybeans the third year, corn and/or small grains the fourth year, soybeans the
fifth, oats and some alfalfa in the sixth year, and alfalfa beginning the cycle
again in the seventh year. Alfalfa is the main component of weed control,
Johnson says--"it's a smother crop"--and any weeds that do survive are
harvested forage or hay--"so the cattle have a good chance of eating up
your mistakes." Fertilizer comes from 120 cow-calf pairs and a small farrow-to-finish
operation. The manure from both is composted, which Johnson says breaks the
manure down, creates more balance, and makes it more granular and lighter to
apply. This means fewer tons to the field, "which reduces hauling costs and
it reduces nitrogen contamination." These farming practices may be
labor-intensive, but input costs are controlled and the organic
soybeans--whether exported to Japan for tofu or sold as feed for organic poultry
and cattle in the U.S.--command a healthy price two to three times the going
market rate.
A South Dakota State University research team has conducted wetland and
buffer research on the Johnson farm for five years. Led by agroecologist Diane
Rickerl, the team includes geographer Janet Gritzner, rural sociologist Donna
Hess, and economist Larry Janssen, as well as Charlie Johnson and his wife,
Bette. Their work compared buffered and non-buffered systems:
The analysis most useful to the farmer is the productivity and nutrient
uptake of the buffer vegetation. Total nitrogen uptake was similar for the two
systems, 173 ?pounds/acre in the non-buffered and 183 in the buffered. The
nutrient removal in ?the non-buffered system was through the wetland vegetation.
This nitrogen will ?continue to cycle through the wetland and is lost from
agricultural productivity. In the buffered system, 101 pounds/acre of nitrogen
were taken up by the buffer and ?can be utilized as hay. The trend was similar
for phosphorus uptake in wetland ?vegetation and buffers. Wetland vegetation in
the non-buffered system contained 24 pounds/acre P. In the buffered system, 13
pounds/acre were in the buffer ?vegetation and wetland vegetation P content was
reduced to 9 pounds/acre. The ?amount of N and P contained in the wetland
vegetation was less than half that of the ?non-buffered system.
Rickerl and Janssen then compared budgets for Johnson's fields with budgets
for different farming systems and management scenarios. The farm management
systems compared were transitional no-till, conventional, and organic. Each
farming system was superimposed on a field with a natural resource base typical
of the prairie pothole region. The wetland management scenarios compared were 1)
farm through the wetlands, 2) use a buffer block around the wetlands and harvest
it for hay, or 3) use the buffer block/hay system, but also enroll it in the
Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP).
Rickerl and her team noted how powerful WRP is. They wrote, "A specific
recommendation that can be made to farmers is that buffer strips improve
environmental impacts of farming wetland landscapes. When coupled with programs
such as WRP, buffer strips can also improve economic returns of farmed wetland
landscapes." Johnson is pleased with the results--for wildlife as well as
for the bottom line. He said, "Diane Rickerl has found we may not have so
much an increase in the wildlife numbers, but we have a greater diversity of
species around our wetlands because of organic farming."
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