DURHAM, N.H. – University of New Hampshire researchers have found that black tarps and cover crops successfully suppressed weeds in an organic vegetable system, allowing scientists to forgo tilling, which can have deleterious effects on soil.

“Many people relish the bucolic image of a plowed field or a tilled garden, but tilling the soil has deleterious effects on soil structure and biology,” said Natalie Lounsbury, a doctoral student in agroecology.

“A tilled, bare soil is vulnerable; in a dry summer like 2016, it dries out quickly from evaporation, leaving plants struggling to get enough water, and in a wet year, it is susceptible to erosion losses.

“Nonetheless, extensive tillage is the standard practice for vegetable production, largely because of the need to control weeds.

“This project attempted an integrated approach to soil and weed management in organic vegetable production that may help small farmers and gardeners alike balance the need for weed control with the desire to improve soil health and conserve soil moisture,” she said.

Research

The research was conducted at the Woodman Horticultural Research Farm, a facility of the NH Agricultural Experiment Station, by Seamus Wolfe, a sustainable agriculture and food systems major, Richard Smith, associate professor of agroecology, Nick Warren, manager of the agroecology lab, and Lounsbury.

The researchers planted a cover crop (a mixture of winter rye and hairy vetch) in the fall. In the spring, they flattened the cover crop using a tractor-mounted tool called a roller-crimper.

After suppressing the cover crops with the roller-crimper they covered the resulting mulch with either black tarps, clear tarps or no tarps.

Then the researchers removed the tarps and planted cabbage directly into the cover crop mulch to determine if cabbage yields and future weed suppression varied depending on treatment.

Although the cabbage has not been harvested yet to assess yield, scientists said they can see dramatic treatment effects regarding weed suppression.

Conclusions

To draw broader conclusions, more research under a variety of soil and climate conditions is needed, but the first results are both promising and interesting.

“The weed suppression where there was a black tarp is nearly 100 percent six weeks after transplanting, whereas there is substantial weed growth and/or vetch regrowth in the other treatments.

“Clear tarps rapidly killed the cover crops and weeds, but the weed suppression did not last. Where there was no tarp at all, there is substantial vetch regrowth,” Lounsbury said.

Organic no-till has been called the holy grail of farming because it has the potential to bring together two practices — organic farming and no-till farming — that each reduce the environmental impact of agriculture but have been largely incompatible.

Organic farming relies on tillage to control weeds, while no-till farming primarily relies on herbicides.

Eliminating tillage and herbicides is extremely difficult, but researchers and farmers throughout the country have been making tremendous advances in the last decade by using cover crops grown in place and then mechanically killed to provide a mulch to help manage weeds.

Much of this research has been in organic grain cropping systems, but there is substantial evidence that these systems can work for vegetable production, too.

“In an increasingly variable climate, production systems that can handle wet and dry extremes will become even more important. The beauty of a system like a cover-crop based no-till system is that it is buffered against these extremes. The key concept in these systems is resilience,” Lounsbury said.