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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag Crops & Agronomy
Companion cropping wheat and beans
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<blockquote data-quote="Philip Hedeng" data-source="post: 6358104" data-attributes="member: 40228"><p>The discussion of N-release from beans to wheat is interesting. Normally it's said, here and elsewhere, that beans won't share any N and the release will come with breakdown of its residue. Why would it, as it doesn't want to feed any competition?</p><p>On the other hand, I've seen data of N-sharing happening. The reason I could see would be that in a healthy soil, beans would swap N for other nutrients that are harder to come by that certain micro-organisms are better able to mine. Situations where this would cost less energy for the bean plants than mining on its own. I would not expect to see this interaction in conventional studies as the soils won't allow this exchange as one or several factors are missing.</p><p>I don't have the data readily, but I'm sure I've seen it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Philip Hedeng, post: 6358104, member: 40228"] The discussion of N-release from beans to wheat is interesting. Normally it's said, here and elsewhere, that beans won't share any N and the release will come with breakdown of its residue. Why would it, as it doesn't want to feed any competition? On the other hand, I've seen data of N-sharing happening. The reason I could see would be that in a healthy soil, beans would swap N for other nutrients that are harder to come by that certain micro-organisms are better able to mine. Situations where this would cost less energy for the bean plants than mining on its own. I would not expect to see this interaction in conventional studies as the soils won't allow this exchange as one or several factors are missing. I don't have the data readily, but I'm sure I've seen it. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag Crops & Agronomy
Companion cropping wheat and beans
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