Purdue Pest & Crop Newsletter
September 3, 2010
Here is Issue 23 of the Pest&Crop Newsletter
January 18, 2007 Agronomy
There’s more to the economics of continuous corn production than simply cashing in on potentially higher corn prices generated by growing ethanol demand. Growers should take the time to weigh those factors before making any decision to switch production practices.
Barry Ward, an Ohio State University Extension economist, said that taking the plunge into continuous corn production from the standard corn-soybean rotation requires extensive budgeting of challenges growers may face from planting through harvest.
“Higher corn prices have many wondering if planting more corn acres this season might not be a bad idea. But are prices high enough to trigger a switch that will change a grower’s crop rotations and have other long-term effects?” said Ward. “The question many growers have to ask themselves is, ‘Will corn after corn net more than the more common rotation of soybeans after corn’"?
Ward said there are many economic factors that growers should take into consideration when deciding to rotate into continuous corn production. They include:
Despite the management challenges and potential added costs of continuous corn production, some savings exist that support the switch from soybeans to corn, including the lack of chemical applications that may be needed for soybean aphid or soybean rust.
Ward recommends that growers pencil out their costs from operating expenses to production challenges based on their own price, yield and cost projections when deciding to make the switch to continuous corn production.
“Most growers are not taking the big plunge from soybeans straight into corn. Many are just rolling a small percentage of their soybean acreage, 5 percent to 25 percent, into corn production,” said Ward. “This year, I think growers are just going to test the waters and see what the results turn out to be. They need to decide if time, dollars and commitment relative to their net return is worth it.”
For more information on budgeting for continuous corn production, log on to OSU Extension’s Ag Manager newsletter.
September 2, 2010
Two more posted this week: High Night-Time Temperatures and Stalk Cannibalization in Corn Anth...
August 31, 2010
C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2010-28 08/31/10-09/07/10 Editor: Andrew Kleinschmidt
August 30, 2010
An ancient offshoot of soybeans may one day provide resistance to sudden death syndrome (SDS) and soybean rust, University of Illinois scientists reported at the recent U of I Agronomy Day.