3. Weed control
It is commonly known that the moldboard plow
is the most effective tool for
m
echanical weed
control in humid areas. Yet on the other hand it is
a very energy
-
plus labor consuming tool. And
the bare soil surface left by the plow induces ero
-
sion. This applies especially to sloped fields with
silty soils and continental climate.
T
he steady
advances in chemical weed control induce the
farmers more and more to rely on herbi
c
ides
instead of the plow. From an environmental point
of view the herbicides as well as the plow can be
questioned. Yet the future looks brighter for
weed control by herbicides than for weed control
by the plow. The advances which are in progress
for efficient and environmentally safe herbicides
as well as for crops made r
e
sistant to herbicides
by genetic engineering are remarkable. It will
hardly be possible to o
f
fset these ad vances by
better plows.
4. Crop residue management
The less cultivation occurs, the more the crop
residues can hamper the establishment of the next
crop. This applies especially when crops follow
one after another within a short time period
as
e.g. with a rotation winter rape
-
winter wheat -
winter barley, which is very common in
Schleswig-Holstein. If plowing is omitted, straw
not needed for bedding or other pur
p
ose, and
straw burning in the field is prohibited, the farmer
needs a method
f
or coping with straw near the
seeds. Cutting through the straw by heavy disk
openers for direc
t-
drilling sometimes is possible
in dry regions, when the soil is rather hard and
the straw is brittle. In humid areas this method
often fails, since the soil as well as the straw here
are more flexi ble. Therefore the straw is not cut
by the disk
-
openers, but pushed into the furrow.
The result very often is a low field eme rgence.
The situation is different with widely spaced crop
such as sugar beets, maize and so
y
beans. The
wider ro
w-
spacings allow using residue clearing
attachments to the seeders, which move the
straw to the inter
-
row area. In spring,
furthermore, not much straw is left. And residues
of some catch
-
crops are easily cut by disk
-
openers even in humid regions.
Straw on or near the soil surface is very e
f
fective
in reducing erosion. There have been attempts to
place it on the surface immed
i
ately after sowing
(
Fig. 6
). Our concept for this has been a rotary
-
cultivator with a tran
s
verse bar for broadcast
-
sowing and sieves, onto which the soil
-
straw
mixture is thrown. The soil particles pass the
sieve openings and thus get directly onto the
seeds, whereas most straw particles do not pass
and thus are placed onto the surface. A rotating
drum-sieve as well a
s
a chain
-
sieve were used.
The chain
-
sieve separated more effectively and
therefore the results presented later refer to it.
In case the preceding grain crop was ha
r
vested
by stripping, the standing straw left can also be
placed on top of the seed bed by flailing it aside.
This method has been used at the Uni versity of
Giessen [3].
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