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Study Finds Biotech Crops Facilitating Decrease in Soil
Cultivation The comprehensive study investigates the link between the introduction of biotech crops and a 35 percent increase in no-till acres, the practice where crops are grown without any soil tillage such as plowing. Farmers who grow crop varieties with built-in tolerance to certain herbicides may eliminate tillage because they can control weeds that compete with crops for nutrients, water and sunlight, the report says.
“Nearly all growth in no-till acreage occurred where
herbicide-tolerant crop varieties can help farmers control weeds without
needing to repeatedly disrupt precious topsoil,” said Dan Towery, CTIC
natural resources specialist who co-authored the study. “As a result,
society is reaping another wave of environmental benefits associated with
further reducing tillage on our farmland.” “Americans now have cleaner and more affordable drinking water because farmers tripled the number of acres they plant with conservation tillage in the past two decades, but we can do even better as more farmers plant biotech crops and convert to no-till farming systems,” Towery said. “This is especially important as our world’s experts are gathered to grapple with the issues of water availability and water quality.” Because conservation tillage requires fewer trips across the field for weed control, farmers are using 306 million fewer gallons of fuel per year to power their equipment. It also reduces the amount of carbon dioxide released into the air by as much as 1 billion pounds per year over the traditional plowing practices of a generation ago. In addition to building healthier soils, the study concluded cropland in conservation tillage provides a more hospitable environment for wildlife, such as birds and insects. The study noted wildlife, such as quail, thrives by cutting the time of their daily hunt for food by as much as 80 percent in no-till soybean fields versus traditional plowed soybean fields. Meanwhile, no-till fields have three to six times as many soil loosening earthworms that help incorporate organic residues, aerate the soil and improve water filtration. “Biotech crops are a relatively new tool that offer substantial benefits to farmers, society and nature,” Towery said. “It’s new technologies such as this that will allow us to feed a growing world population while protecting our precious environmental resources.”
The complete report, “Conservation Tillage and Plant
Biotechnology: How New Technologies Can Improve the Environment by
Reducing the Need to Plow,” is available at
www.ctic.purdue.edu. # # # |