Authors
JF Angus, JA Kirkegaard, JR Hunt, MH Ryan, L Ohlander, MB Peoples
Publication date
2015/5/29
Source
Crop and pasture science
Volume
66
Issue
6
Pages
523-552
Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Description
Wheat crops usually yield more when grown after another species than when grown after wheat. Quantifying the yield increase and explaining the factors that affect the increase will assist farmers to decide on crop sequences. This review quantifies the yield increase, based on >900 comparisons of wheat growing after a break crop with wheat after wheat. The mean increase in wheat yield varied with species of break crop, ranging from 0.5 t ha–1 after oats to 1.2 t ha–1 after grain legumes. Based on overlapping experiments, the observed ranking of break-crop species in terms of mean yield response of the following wheat crop was: oats < canola ≈ mustard ≈ flax < field peas ≈ faba beans ≈ chickpeas ≈ lentils ≈ lupins. The mean additional wheat yield after oats or oilseed break crops was independent of the yield level of the following wheat crop. The wheat yield response to legume break crops was …
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JF Angus, JA Kirkegaard, JR Hunt, MH Ryan… - Crop and pasture science, 2015