The Queen Bean, Tofu & Dead Zones (JMU 2018)
Tofu. That’s what most people think soybeans are grown for. But most soybeans in the U.S. are grown for oil and livestock feed. It’s big business. America is the world’s largest producer and exporter of soybeans with almost 75 million acres planted annually. It is second only to corn, planted on roughly 84 million acres. The top ten soybean producing states are all in the Mississippi River watershed. You’ve heard of “King Corn”, well now there’s “Queen Bean”.
Grain producers in the Midwest and their deep pocketed lobbying groups such as the American Farm Bureau and The Fertilizer Institute are “skeered” they might have to buck up to EPA pressure to do more to keep their soil, nutrients and pesticides out of the Mississippi River, which by the way, is the leading cause for the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico – the second largest in the world. That’s why they recently sent a delegation of soybean growers to the Eastern Shore of Delaware and Maryland to find out just what our Chesapeake farmers are doing to help us restore the Chesapeake Bay. OMG…they might have to implement soil conservation measures!
I wrote an OPED piece for the Bay Journal News Service about it which was distributed on April 21st. Read the piece here.
As with all annually planted crops soil conservation and nutrient management are a imperative to keep what farmers pay dearly for, fertilizer and pesticides, from leaching into ground water or running off into nearby ditches, streams and rivers.
Soybeans are especially vulnerable to both. The steeper the land, the more conservation practices are needed to prevent polluted runoff. Combinations of practices such as no-till farming, planting on the contour, cover crops, crop rotation, contour strip farming and nutrient management are very effective at preventing soil erosion and reducing water runoff. The simple practice of planting on the contour can reduce the likelihood of soil erosion in half.
I have witnessed a lot of soil erosion from soybeans being planted on sloping fields. Here’s why they are vulnerable: beans are usually harvested late in the fall, which is often too late to plant winter cover crops.
Their residues (what’s left after the beans are harvested) have a low carbon to nitrogen ratio so it breakes down or decomposes much faster than corn stalks. This leaves a high percentage of the field bare. Bare soil through the winter is a recipe for disastrous soil erosion and runoff.
It’s a simple fix: plant cover crops, reduce tillage and plant on the contour.
Learn more about soil health here.
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