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Life Sciences
Plant Sciences, Zoology & Evolution
Can legumes make the soil more fertile?
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Can legumes make the soil more fertile?
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thedoc
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Can legumes make the soil more fertile?
«
on:
20/08/2013 12:41:52 »
Are nitrogen fixing legumes the solution to Western
Australia's soil fertility problems?
Read a transcript of the interview by clicking here
or [chapter podcast=1000466 track=13.08.15/Naked_Scientists_Show_13.08.15_1001209.mp3]
Listen to it now[/chapter] or
[download as MP3]
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Last Edit: 20/08/2013 12:41:52 by _system
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CliffordK
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Re: Can legumes make the soil more fertile?
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20/08/2013 19:17:24 »
Great program, worth listening to. Hopefully the transcript will be put up soon. I think we do need to consider better Nitrogen capture. Undoubtedly tilling bio matter into the soil will also help improve the soil beyond just adding Nitrogen.
I thought a little about the wheat production in Eastern Washington when listening to the program. Moisture is a problem. I'm not sure exactly what they do, but I think they grow wheat one year. Then leave the fallow one year in which the soil is supposed to soak up some moisture, and then grow a wheat crop again the third year. I think the program mentioned a legume that took about 2 years to mature. It would seem as if there would be a lot of time growing secondary crops.
Last year I did an experiment planting peas and corn in the same row. I should probably try the experiment again, but it seemed as if neither the peas, nor the corn grew well. So co-planting peas and corn didn't work well.
Thus, I presume the legumes would have to be part of a crop rotation.
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