Section 10 Table of Contents

Table 1.10-6. Characteristics of common cover crops.

Species Life cycle¹ Hardy
through
zone
Seeding
rate² (lb/A)
Seeding
depth
(inches)
Seeding
date
N-capture/
fertilizer
equivalency
(lbs/A)
Advantages Disadvantages
Grasses (Cool season)
¹A=annual; WA=winter annual; B=biennial; SLP=short-lived perennial; LLP=long-lived perennial; NFT= no frost tolerance
²Higher rates may be necessary for broadcast seedings
Cereal rye (Secale cereale L.) WA 3 112 (2 bu) 1–2 Sept.–Nov. 1 Excellent nutrient scavenger (esp. N) Most cold tolerant of commonly used cover crops; providing living cover in winter and spring, erosion control, weed suppression, nutrient recycling, organic matter improvement, soil tilth improvement; earliest small grain to mature Regrowth may occur if not completely controlled; explosive growth in spring poses termination challenges; possible following crop suppression due to allelopathy or nutrient tie-up; may attract some insect pests.
Winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) WA 4 120 (2 bu) 1–2 Sept.–Nov. 1 Excellent nutrient scavenger (esp. N) Cold tolerant in most of PA; rapid growth; common varieties not as tall as rye and therefore easier to manage; provides living cover in winter and spring, erosion control, weed suppression, nutrient recycling, organic matter improvement, soil tilth improvement Accumulates lower amounts of biomass than rye; possible following crop suppression due to nutrient tie-up; may attract some insect pests; matures after triticale
Winter triticale WA 3 120 (2 bu) 1–2 Sept.–Nov. 1 Excellent nutrient scavenger (esp. N) Intermediate between wheat and rye Intermediate between wheat and rye; matures after barley
Winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) WA 6 120 (2.5 bu) 1–2 Sept.–Oct. 15 Good nutrient scavenger Cold tolerant in southern parts of PA; common varieties not as tall as rye and therefore easier to manage in spring; provides living cover in winter and spring, erosion control, weed suppression, nutrient recycling, organic matter improvement, soil tilth improvement Winterkill is possible; accumulates lower amounts of biomass than wheat; possible crop suppression due to nutrient tie-up; matures after cereal rye
Spring oats (Avena sativa L.) SA 8 100 (3 bu) 1–2 Aug.–Sept. 15 Average nutrient scavenger Very easy to manage because winterkills; provides erosion control, weed suppression, nutrient recycling, organic matter improvement, soil tilth improvement in fall, rapid growth in cool weather; ideal for quick fall cover or nurse crop with legumes; may produce more biomass in fall than other winter small grains if planted early Winterkills in most of PA, no living root system in winter and spring; erosion control may be limited in spring; high lodging potential; susceptible to disease and insect pests
Annual ryegrass (Lolium spp.) WA 6 20 0.25–0.5 Aug.–Sept. 15 Good nutrient scavenger Cold tolerant in southern parts of PA; varieties not as tall as rye; provides living cover in winter and spring, erosion control, weed suppression, nutrient recycling, organic matter improvement, soil tilth improvement, high-quality fodder May winterkill; may be difficult to control; low heat tolerance; may harbor insects; may reseed and become weed
Legumes
Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth) WA 4 15–20 1–2 Aug.–early Sept. 80–160 Most cold tolerant and high biomass production; above-average drought tolerance; adapted to wide range of soil types; combines well with small grains Requires early fall establishment; slow to establish; matures in late spring; high P and K requirement for maximum growth; can harbor pests; potential weed problem in winter grain; glyphosate not full-proof for control
Crimson clover (Trifolium incarnatum L.) WA/SA 6 15–20 0.25–0.5 Aug.–early Sept. 70–130 Fairly cold tolerant; rapid fall growth; high biomass production; matures midspring; above-average shade tolerance; forage use (no bloat); good nematode resistance May winterkill; requires early fall establishment; poor heat and drought tolerance; residue has tough stems, difficult to no-till plant into
Red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) SLP (2–3 yrs) 4 8–10 0.25–0.5 Feb.–June 70–120 Survives winter; deep taproot; soils; tolerates wet soil conditions and shade; forage use, especially if mixed with grass Needs to be established before midsummer because initial growth slow; high P and K requirements for maximum growth; hard seed can persist creating volunteer problems; pure stand forage causes bloat; vulnerable to some pathogens, insects
Field peas (Pisum spp.) (e.g. Austrian winter pea) SA/WA 7 50–80 1.5–2.0 Aug.–Sept. 15 50–150 Rapid growth in cool weather; versatile legume; interseed with cereal and Brassica spp.; used as food or feed May winterkill; shallow root system; sensitive to heat and humidity; susceptible to diseases, insect pests
Other Crops
Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum Moench) SA NFT 35–134 0.5–1.5 Spring or late summer Fair to good nutrient scavenger (esp. P, Ca) Grows on wide variety of soils (infertile, poorly tilled, low pH); rapid growth; quick smother crop and good soil conditioner Limited growing season; not winter hardy; limited biomass accumulation; frost sensitive; poor growth on heavy limestone soils; occasional pests
Brassicas (Cruciferae family) (e.g. rape, radish) WA 8 5–12 0.25–0.5 Spring or fall Good nutrient scavenger (esp. N, P, Ca) Quick establishment in cool weather; prevent erosion in fall (radish) and spring (canola, rape); radish easy to manage because winterkills; deep, thick root systems; compaction alleviation; nutrient cycling; weed suppression Radish winterkills in all of PA, while canola/rapeseed may winterkill in northern parts of PA; radish leaves soil bare in spring, therefore mix with a small grain