Agronomy of Dryland Corn Production at the Northern Fringe of the Great Plains

jpa ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 606-613 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Major ◽  
R. J. Morrison ◽  
R. E. Blackshaw ◽  
B. T. Roth
2020 ◽  
pp. 56-73
Author(s):  
Karl Raitz

Kentucky’s nineteenth-century distillers used Indian corn as their primary grain, but they also distilled wheat, rye, and barley. Thus, they needed reliable sources of quality grain. Corn became a staple grain, consumed in quantity by farm families and town residents alike. Corn was widely grown in the nineteenth century, but before 1860, only farmers in the Bluegrass region were producing sufficient grain to feed their own livestock, sell to millers for human consumption, and meet distillers’ demands. After the Civil War, corn production increased, and the grain became more widely available for industrial-scale distilling. Wheat and rye were not extensively grown in Kentucky; they were more valuable than corn for foodstuffs and were not favored by distillers. Although Kentucky farmers produced barley, supplies were often deficient in quantity and quality for malting and use by distillers, necessitating its importation by rail from producers on the Great Plains and in the Canadian Prairie Provinces. Distillers fed hogs and cattle on spent grains, or slop, throughout the distilling season, and by season’s end in late spring, the animals had achieved market weight. This was a form of agriculture-distilling complementarity.


2012 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 94-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adlul Islam ◽  
Lajpat R. Ahuja ◽  
Luis A. Garcia ◽  
Liwang Ma ◽  
Anapalli S. Saseendran ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 1185-1196
Author(s):  
C. Alan Rotz ◽  
Senorpe Asem-Hiablie ◽  
Erin L. Cortus ◽  
Mindy J. Spiehs ◽  
Shafiqur Rahman ◽  
...  

HighlightsThe Integrated Farm System Model appropriately represented average emission rates measured in corn production.Compared to the use of feedlot manure, application of bedded pack manure generally increased N and P losses.Compared to inorganic fertilizer use, cattle manure increased soluble P loss while reducing GHG emission.Production and environmental differences among production systems were similar under recent and future climates.Abstract. Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and carbon (C) emissions from livestock systems have become important regional, national, and international concerns. Our objective was to use process-level simulation to explore differences among manure and inorganic fertilizer treatments in a corn production system used to feed finishing cattle in the Northern Great Plains region of the U.S. Our analysis included model assessment, simulation to compare treatments under recent climate, and comparisons using projected midcentury climate. The Integrated Farm System Model was evaluated in representing the performance and nutrient losses of corn production using cattle manure without bedding, manure with bedding, urea, and no fertilization treatments. Two-year field experiments conducted near Clay Center, Nebraska; Brookings, South Dakota; and Fargo, North Dakota provided observed emission data following these treatments. Means of simulated emission rates of methane, ammonia, and nitrous oxide were generally similar to those observed from field-applied manure or urea fertilizer. Simulation of corn production systems over 25 years of recent climate showed greater soluble P runoff with use of feedlot and bedded manure compared to use of inorganic fertilizers, but life-cycle fossil energy use and greenhouse gas emission were decreased. Compared to feedlot manure, application of bedded pack manure generally increased N and P losses in corn production by retaining more N in manure removed from a bedded housing facility and through increased runoff because a large portion of the stover was removed from the cornfield for use as bedding material. Simulation of these treatments using projected midcentury climate indicated a trend toward a small increase in simulated grain production in the Dakotas and a small decrease for irrigated corn in Nebraska. Climate differences affected the three production systems similarly, so production and environmental impact differences among the fertilization systems under future climate were similar to those obtained under recent climate. Keywords: Climate change, Greenhouse gas, Integrated Farm System Model, Nutrient losses.


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