Minimum tillage could benefit California rice farmers

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Abstract

Field research and grower interviews were used to evaluate the potential of minimum tillage for California rice systems. We found that by tilling only in the fall (instead of both the fall and spring), rice farmers can control herbicide-resistant weeds when combined with a stale rice seedbed, which entails spring flooding to germinate weeds followed by a glyphosate application to kill them. Our results indicated that yield potentials are comparable between water-seeded minimum- and conventional-till systems. We also found that rice growers can reduce fuel costs and plant early. However, minimum tillage may require more nitrogen fertilizer to achieve these yields.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Linquist, B., Fischer, A., Godfrey, L., Greer, C., Hill, J., Koffler, K., … Van Kessel, C. (2008). Minimum tillage could benefit California rice farmers. California Agriculture, 62(1), 24–29. https://doi.org/10.3733/ca.v062n01p24

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