Soil Fertility and Management
Optimum soil condition is crucial for the success of your forage crops. Soil fertility management is a continuous process that begins long before the establishment of any forage crops.
Use Penn State Extension’s extensive resources on soil health and fertility management for forage crops, covering topics such as soil crusting, compaction, and rill erosion. Find tips on phosphorus, potassium, and nitrogen, crop rotation, no-till crops, and nutrient planning.
Soil Fertility for Forages
To make the most of your soil you have to understand what components are essential and how to manage them. Penn State Extension runs a series of Soil Health Twilight Meeting workshops in which you’re given the opportunity to get hands-on with different types of soil and share ideas with others who have an interest in the health of their soil. Being able to assess the quality of the soil is another skill that’s vital. The Penn State Agronomy Guide also has lots of information on soil management.
Soil is a critical resource and the way in which you manage its health can either improve or degrade it. You can use a number of different farming practices to manage your soil, including tilling, cultivating, adding fertilizers and lime, growing cover crops, applying manure, and rotating crops.
There are various ways you can improve the health of the soil; for example transitioning to no-till planting. It’s also possible to use forage crops to help prevent soil erosion and soil compaction. This can be a serious issue if conditions are wet in the fall and spring.
Severe soil compaction as a result of harvesting or manure spreading can severely limit the growth of crops. You can avoid compaction by adopting strategies such as reducing axle load, increasing equipment footprints with the use of tracks or flotation tires, and reducing the number of trips over the field.
Pasture planning is another way to greatly improve forage quality and quantity. Pasture management is something you should give attention to all year round. One aspect you should give high priority to is spring green-up.
Grazing Management and Soil Health
Grazing is a very economical way to feed your animals. However, effective grazing management is essential if you want to avoid problems such as soil compaction. During the summer, in particular, it’s also important to pay attention so you don’t overgraze your pastures.
One way to eliminate overgrazing is to keep an eye on residue heights. During the cool-season, perennial grasses should have a grazing residue height of 3-4”. Whereas during the peak growth season adequate pasture regrowth is still possible around the 3” mark.
Grazing animals on steep slopes can lead to soil degradation. Winter feeding and wet weather can cause severe pasture degradation. Penn State Extension’s Pasture Workshops provide information on how to improve pasture growth, control weeds, and get the most out of the grazing season.
Nutrient Management With Forage Crops
If you want to maintain soil health and soil fertility, understanding the importance of nutrients is key to success. A number of different chemical elements are essential for plant growth; however, the one that needs careful management is nitrogen. The removal of nitrogen from the soil takes place in three different ways – nitrate leaching, denitrification, and volatilization. Nitrogen management is key for optimal forage yield and quality.
One important key for improving forage yield is selecting the right fertilizer or manure. To help with this decision you have to be able to assess nitrogen availability. A process called the nitrogen cycle controls the amount of nitrogen available in the soil. It makes up almost 80% of air, but plants can’t use it until it has been fixed or taken from the air. This can be done industrially, or with the use of certain soil bacteria, together with a forage crop like legumes.
Soil tests can be done and recommendations followed for using organic nutrient sources. An understanding of how different management practices affect soil nitrogen and carbon dynamics is also beneficial. Carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus all play an important role in supporting healthy soils and improving crop yields. Researchers continue to look for the best ways to manage the levels of these nutrients in the soil.
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ArticlesIntegrating Grazing in No-Till Systems on a Grain Farm
The adoption of no-tillage systems in Pennsylvania creates opportunities to graze after harvest. This case study examines the integration of grazing and no-tillage on a grain farm. -
ArticlesPlant Diversity to Extend the Grazing Season
This case study shows how a farmer in northwestern Pennsylvania is using annuals and perennials to expand his grazing season while managing for reduced inputs and improved soil health through integration of grazing and no-tillage. -
ArticlesSoil Health in Field and Forage Crop Production
This publication emphasizes the natural principles of the no-till system and discusses 14 management techniques for improving soil health. -
ArticlesPennsylvania Soil Quality Assessment Worksheet
This publication is intended to help agricultural producers, gardeners, and others assess the quality of their soil. -
ArticlesManaging Phosphorus for Agriculture and the Environment
Phosphorus is an essential element for plant and animal growth, but too much of it can accelerate the natural aging of lakes and streams. -
ArticlesManaging Phosphorus for Crop Production
Phosphorus is a macronutrient and component of nucleic acids, and plays a vital role in plant reproduction, of which grain production is an important result. -
ArticlesManaging Potassium for Crop Production
A corn crop takes up nearly as much potassium (K) as it does nitrogen (N), yet management of each nutrient is entirely different. -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Decision-Making
Effective nutrient management requires decisions to be made at several different levels of detail: strategic, tactical, and operational (Figure 1). -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Exploring Performance Criteria
The focus of nutrient management is rapidly evolving from optimizing agronomic production and economic returns of crop production to balancing farm production with environmental protection. -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Introduction to the Concepts
Nutrient management has taken on new meaning in recent times. Soil fertility traditionally dealt with supplying and managing nutrients to meet crop production requirements. -
ArticlesA Nutrient Management Approach for Pennsylvania: Plant Nutrient Stocks and Flows
Decision-making in agriculture affects the distribution of materials such as crops and manure within farms, and the movement of materials such as feeds and farm products to and from farms. -
ArticlesSoil Acidity and Aglime
Soil acidity is among the important environmental factors which can influence plant growth, and can seriously limit crop production. -
ArticlesNutrient Management Planning: An Overview
Nutrient management traditionally has been concerned with optimizing the economic returns from nutrients used to produce a crop. -
ArticlesManure Spreader Calibration
Manure spreader calibration is an essential and valuable nutrient management tool for maximizing the efficient use of available manure nutrients. -
ArticlesManure Sampling for Nutrient Management Planning
Manure is an excellent source of many essential plant nutrients and, with proper management, can meet nearly all crop nutrient needs. -
ArticlesEarthworms
The burrowing and feeding activity of earthworms have numerous beneficial effects on overall soil quality for crop production. -
ArticlesLate Season Cornstalk Nitrate Test
Nitrogen (N) management is one of the most difficult decisions in corn production because of the many factors that influence nitrogen behavior, including materials, timing, and, especially, weather. -
ArticlesNutrient Budgets for PA Cropland: What They Reveal and How Can They Be Used?
Nutrient budgets have been developed by Mid-Atlantic Regional Water Program to quantify the magnitude and sources of excess nutrients that are being generated and applied throughout Pennsylvania. -
ArticlesThe Pennsylvania Phosphorus Index: Version 2
Gives descriptions of factors and how to determine them in developing a nitrogen-based nutrient management plan that will then be evaluated using the Phosphorus Index provided. -
ArticlesEffects of Soil Compaction
Soil compaction is the reduction of soil volume due to external factors; this reduction lowers soil productivity and environmental quality. -
ArticlesAvoiding Soil Compaction
The increasing size of farm equipment may cause significant soil compaction that can negatively affect soil productivity as well as environmental quality. -
ArticlesNitrogen Fertilization of Corn
Nitrogen (N), an element that literally surrounds us, changes in form and chemistry almost continuously and moves from one location to another without our notice. -
ArticlesPersistence of Herbicides in Soil
While it is desirable for the chemicals to control weeds during the season of application, it is not desirable for them to persist and affect subsequent crop growth. -
ArticlesStarter Fertilizer
Starter fertilizers enhance the development of emerging seedlings by supplying essential nutrients in accessible locations near the roots. -
ArticlesSoil Fertility Management for Forage Crops: Establishment
This article will deal with the establishment phase of soil fertility management for forages.


