Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-31-2023
Department
Agriculture
Keywords
cover crop economics, cover crops, crop residue management, processing tomato management, sustainable tomato production, tomato economics
Abstract
Given the potential environmental and economic sustainability consequences of cover crop adoption, N fertilizer application, and residue management, this study focuses on the yield and financial effects of these on processing tomato production in Ontario, Canada. The study employs financial modeling using field data from a long-term cover crop experiment (oat, cereal rye, radish, and a radish-rye mixture) from 2010 to 2020. Averaged over six experimental years, compared to no cover (87 Mg ha−1) radish (99.6 Mg ha−1) and radish-rye mix (95.2 Mg ha−1) cover crops produce statistically significantly higher tomato yields as isolated practices, increasing farm net returns by $1120 ha−1 and $604 ha−1, respectively. When combined with N application, rye application additionally results in tomato yields statistically significantly higher than the base practice of no cover crop, zero N application and retained residue. Oat cover does not appear to have a statistically significant effect on tomato yields in this dataset. The application of N fertilizer results in statistically significantly higher tomato yield, increasing net returns by $882 ha−1, while residue management does not.
Source Publication Title
Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Volume
38
Issue
e40
First Page
1
DOI
10.1017/S1742170523000339
Recommended Citation
Kerr, J., De Laporte, A., Weersink, A., Vyn, R. J., & Van Eerd, L. L. (2023). Effects of Cover Crop, N and Residue Management on the Financial Sustainability of Processing Tomatoes in Southwestern Ontario. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems, 38 (e40), 1. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1742170523000339
Comments
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