1 / 17

Alternative Crop Options for Southeast Missouri

Alternative Crop Options for Southeast Missouri. Alan Weber Thomas Jefferson Agricultural Institute www.jeffersoninstitute.org. Jefferson Institute. The Jefferson Institute is a non-profit education and research center with a primary focus on crop diversification.

roth
Download Presentation

Alternative Crop Options for Southeast Missouri

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Alternative Crop Optionsfor Southeast Missouri Alan Weber Thomas Jefferson Agricultural Institute www.jeffersoninstitute.org

  2. Jefferson Institute • The Jefferson Institute is a non-profit education and research center with a primary focus on crop diversification. • Assist farmers with production methods • Identify and develop markets • Address policy and institutional barriers • One of our areas of work is developing sunflowers, millets, and other alternative crops for southeast Missouri

  3. A century of Missouri crop production (1900-2000)

  4. Opportunities with Sunflowers • Can be grown with grain crop equipment • Drought tolerant crop • Markets available in Missouri for birdseed • Current contract price of $9.50/cwt. • Loan deficiency payment of typically $1.50/cwt. • Yields typically 2000 lbs/acre or better • Large number of varieties, including NuSun types which are mid-level in oleic acid

  5. Sunflower Production Methods • Select a good variety (see MU variety tests) • Can be planted from early April through late July • Plant 15,000 to 25,000 plants per acre (3-4 lbs.) • Plant about 1 inch deep in wide rows • Wider rows allows use of cultivator and row crop head • Fertilize with about 80-100 lbs./acre N • Several herbicide options available • Harvest when back of head turns brown

  6. Sunflower Irrigation • Irrigation timing • For one irrigation, either at bud or early bloom • For two irrigations, do one at early bud stage and one at full bloom • Crop is not very responsive to irrigation during vegetative stage unless needed for establishment • Response to irrigation • Under dry conditions, ND researchers found 190 lb./acre yield increase per inch of irrigation water • Total increase of 50% yield improvement on coarse textured soils in ND (where there is less rainfall)

  7. Oilseed Sunflower Marketing • Birdseed • Ten’s of thousands of acres of demand in Missouri • Bulk delivery points in Missouri • Transportation advantage over sunflowers grown in Kansas or the Dakotas • Local value-added opportunities • Nu-Sun or high oleic acid sunflowers • Potential oil premiums

  8. Other Issues/Considerations • Quality specifications for birdseed • Foreign material • Moisture • Test weight • Pest pressure • Equipment needs • Contracting • Transportation

  9. Opportunities with Millets • Three possible millets to grow • Proso millet (short crop, common birdseed) • Pearl millet (traditional forage, new grain hybrids) • Foxtail millet (easy to grow, golden seed) • Millets can be grown for birdseed market • Birdseed prices are higher than for feed grain • Pearl millet may be a premium poultry feed • All three of these millets are drought tolerant, and can be double-cropped after wheat

  10. Where do Millets such as Pearl Millet Fit into a Rotation?

  11. Millet Production Methods • Planted from mid-May through mid-June • Potential for double-crop • Plant four to five pounds per acre • Planted in rows • Plant about 1/2 inch to one inch deep in wide rows • Wider rows allows use of cultivator and row crop head • Fertilize with about 80-100 lbs./acre N • Similar to milo • Seeds typically mature before plants drys down

  12. Other Issues/Considerations • Market outlets • Question on acceptance as replacement for proso millet in birdseed • Cost competiveness with corn • Yield potential • New varieties developed in Georgia can dramatically impact opportunities

  13. Other Alternative Crop Options • Black beans - for refried beans or soup bean mixes • Amaranth - high value, small market • Winter canola for oilseed and other uses • Flax - early spring crop • Buckwheat - option for late planting • Edamame soybeans - high value, but harvested green

  14. Opportunities for Black Beans • US consumption of dry beans is increasing • Trials indicate revenues can be superior to current commodities • Limited market outlets available

  15. Consumer Interest in Amaranth • High in protein (14-16%) • Well-balanced amino acid profile (close to milk) • Good levels of fiber, calcium and vitamin E • Low levels of fat • Colorful history and flower appearance

  16. Farmer Interest in Amaranth • High price of the grain ($0.40 per pound or higher if organic) • Crop is relatively low cost to grow • Tolerant of dry conditions • Fits into most grain crop rotations

  17. Concluding Remarks • Sunflowers have strong existing birdseed market demand, and potential exists to develop NuSun oil type in southeast Missouri • Pearl, proso, and foxtail millet may be viable options as double crops grown for the birdseed market as well • Other opportunities exist such as black bean or amaranth production that can provide a way to diversify crop rotations and income sources • Contact the Jefferson Institute at 573-449-3518, or visit our website at www.jeffersoninstitute.org

More Related