Catchment News

Catch Crops – improving soil structure and water infiltration, and reducing nitrate and soil loss

Catch crops are grown between successive cereal crops to help protect the soil and reduce the losses of nutrients and sediments and can provide benefits for biodiversity. Fiona Doolan, one of Teagasc’s ASSAP Advisors, tells us about them.

The weather in Ireland as we all know is quite changeable with dry and sunny weather interchanging with rain and wind and Autumn is a time of year that you really experience the full range of weather conditions we farm under in this country. This unpredictable weather has an impact on every day farming life by disrupting seasonal work. It also can have an impact on the level of nutrient and sediment that leaves the land and gets washed into our streams and rivers.

How can advisors help farmers in these unpredictable weather conditions and help reduce the loss of nutrient and sediment into our streams and rivers? Well one thing being advocated for a long time is the use of Catch/Cover Crops in the post-harvest period, normally grown between successive cereal crops. These short-term crops have 3 distinct advantages when it comes to soil condition and health:

  1. Better soil structure and improved compaction resistance
  2. Improved water infiltration and reduced soil loss
  3. Reduced nitrate loss

While the advantages of cover crops in reducing Nitrogen loss (cover crops can typically catch 60 – 120 kg N/Ha) preventing nitrate leaching to ground waters and improving soil structure, have always been known, it is perhaps the beneficial effect cover crops can have on water infiltration that is most relevant to heavy autumnal rainfall events.

A cover crop will help heavy rain to infiltrate the soil, thereby reducing ponding and overland flow of surplus water. They will also provide a cover for the soil in times of high rainfall allowing some protection from erosion by elements.

Fallow ground – poor ability to absorb water (poor infiltration).

The ability of all cover crops (Tillage radish, oats, mustard, rape or kale etc) to produce a root mass underground is far greater than fallow land, meaning an improved ability to absorb and retain rainfall. Areas left unsown after harvest are less able to handle large amounts of rainfall leading to greater loss of sediment, and unfortunately bringing one of our most expensive nutrients, Phosphorus, with it. This loss of Phosphorus poses us with two problems – the financial cost of replacing expensive nutrient but also causes a potential problem to the water quality in out streams and rivers.

Tillage Radish helping to improve soil structure and water infiltration.

As with all crops planning is essential in choosing the right crop for your situation. Sowing date is critical however; ‘A Day’s growth in July is equivalent to a week’s growth in August – but a week’s growth in August is equivalent to a month’s growth in September’. The benefit of that earlier sowing is clearly visible in crops on the ground and what they offer in terms of soil protection.

It is particularly disheartening for any farmer to see the best of his soil washing off his field in torrential rainfall – well established and early sown catch crops can be the glue that holds that soil there while also benefitting biodiversity over the winter months.

Fiona Doolan, Teagasc ASSAP Advisor

Learn more:

www.teagasc.ie/crops/crops/cover-crops

Brassica such as Rape and Kale are popular catch crop choices.

Who is involved?

Quite simply, everyone in Ireland has a role to play. This can be from something as simple as making sure you don’t pollute your local stream, or a local community working together to establish a Rivers Trust to enhance the rivers and lakes in their area, to a Government Department or Agency helping a Minister implement a new policy to help protect and enhance all our water bodies.

This website has been developed and is maintained by the Environmental Protection Agency, and is a collaboration between the Department of Housing, Planning and Local Government, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Local Authority Waters Programme.

LAWCO

Local Authority Waters Programme

The Local Authority Waters Programme coordinates the efforts of local authorities and other public bodies in the implementation of the River Basin Management Plan, and supports local community and stakeholder involvement in managing our natural waters, for everyone’s benefit.

EPA

Environmental Protection Agency

The EPA is responsible for coordinating the monitoring, assessment and reporting on the status of our 4,842 water bodies, looking at trends and changes, determining which waterbodies are at risk and what could be causing this, and drafting environmental objectives for each.

DECLG

Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage

The Department is responsible for making sure that the right policies, regulations and resources are in place to implement the Water Framework Directive, and developing a River Basin Management Plan and Programme of Measures to protect and restore our waters.