By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi State University is researching ways to
make a new cultivation practice used by many Mississippi
rice farmers more profitable. About 50
percent of Mississippi's rice acreage is farmed using
precision leveling and straight levees as farmers have moved
away from the traditional levees that curve to follow the
natural contour of the land. These new rice paddies follow a
constant slope of the land, with straight levees cutting
through the land at right angles to the slope of the
field. Tim
Walker, a rice research assistant with the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, said
precision- leveled fields with straight levees offer many
advantages. "Precision
leveling addresses the environmental issue of water quality.
With precision leveling, we can use 25 to 50 percent less
water to flood our fields," Walker said. "We also have the
ability to better manage the water once it's on the
field." Precision
leveled fields typically have a 0.1 percent slope, or a 1
foot drop for every 1000 lateral feet, and have levees
spaced between 150 and 300 feet apart. Risers at the high
end allow water to flood the field, and gates are
conveniently located at the turn-rows to either keep water
on the field or let it escape. The
research originally was geared to reduce surface water
contamination by limiting the amount of nutrients in the
water allowed to drain off the rice fields. But as this work
progressed, the issue of the fertility of the disturbed soil
became more important. "With
precision leveling, you cut away the soil in high areas and
put the cut soil in low areas, leveling the land to form the
constant slope you want," Walker said. "The problem is that
we end up with a lot of areas in the field where the topsoil
is subsoil, which has a lower fertility status." About a
year ago Walker began trying to determine what fertilizer
rates and amendments can be added to the soil to improve
fertility and still remain cost-effective. "We have
to determine what we can do to limit the time it takes for
some yields to come back to the levels they were before the
field was leveled," Walker said. "We're trying to make sure
we have enough fertilizer budgeted into our nutrient
management plans for cut soils." Precision
leveling is a long term investment. In addition to the cost
of leveling the field, there is a reduction in yields for
some time afterwards. "With
the water, diesel and labor savings that these fields offer,
most growers see the benefit of precision leveling in five
to 10 years," Walker said. The
Mississippi Rice Promotion Board is sponsoring this on- farm
research which is being conducted at MSU under the direction
of Billy Kingery, MAFES rice researcher. Travis
Satterfield, Rice Promotion Board member and rice farmer in
Bolivar County, said the research was initiated after
conventional tests could not determine why soil fertility
was low on recently leveled land. "In
certain areas where we had cuts and a lot of dirt was
removed, we were seeing some difference in plant heights,
vigor and a reduction in yield, even though conventional
soil tests showed the major nutrient levels were OK,"
Satterfield said. "We needed research done to see what could
be done to bring those areas with deep cuts back to full
capacity production." Satterfield
said he thinks most rice production soon will be on
precision-leveled land and this problem will continue to
develop unless it is solved. "This is
one area where we identified the problem and the Mississippi
Rice Promotion Board was able to put some money into trying
to correct that problem," Satterfield said. Released:
July 24, 2000
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
New Rice
Irrigation Offers Many Benefits
Contact: Tim Walker, (662) 325-0257
Visit: DAFVM
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