Kane Republican

Plant scientist gets grant to study how climate change will affect forage crops

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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A Penn State plant scientist has received a $650,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to lead a team studying how changes in temperatur­e associated with climate change affect the establishm­ent, persistenc­e and performanc­e of perennial forage crops and their associated weedy plant communitie­s in the U.S. Northeast.

Carolyn Lowry, assistant professor of plant science in the College of Agricultur­al Sciences, will use the competitiv­e four-year award from USDA’S National Institute of Food and Agricultur­e to fund research to determine the degree to which forage-management practices — such as variety selection and harvest frequency — may reduce or worsen these effects.

“We are focusing on how farmers can manage for climate change, specifical­ly how they can manage forage stands to take advantage of warming winters, but also ensure plants survive in response to increasing winter weather variabilit­y,” she said. “One of the things that we’re seeing is repeated warm spells in winter followed by frigid periods — and that can stress out overwinter­ing plants like alfalfa.”

Perennial forage crops that are coldsensit­ive are especially vulnerable to winter weather variabilit­y and may experience greater incidences of winterkill because of decreased snow cover and warm spells followed by hard frosts in early spring, she explained. Poor winter survival is one of the leading impediment­s to reliable alfalfa stand establishm­ent.

Winter injury can decrease yields and, when severe, can necessitat­e replanting. The management practices that will allow farmers to realize greater yields in response to warming winter temperatur­es — such as increasing the number of harvests per year and switching to less dormant alfalfa varieties — also are likely to leave alfalfa plants more prone to winter injury.

The importance of forage crops to agricultur­e in the Northeast cannot be overstated, according to Lowry. With an economic value of greater than $800 million annually, forages are the backbone of the region’s livestock industries, the largest of which is dairy. Research aimed at evaluating how warmer and more variable weather affects the productivi­ty and stability of perennial forage crop systems is essential to determinin­g optimal forage-management strategies for adapting to the changing climate.

The research will have three major objectives: evaluate the effect that forage management — planting different varieties varying in fall dormancy and forage-harvest frequency — has on alfalfa’s winter injury and survival, as well as forage yield, weed suppressio­n and community compositio­n in response to climate manipulati­ons; characteri­ze the effect of climate manipulati­ons on weed seedbank dynamics and emergence timing; and quantify the extent to which environmen­tal variables within climate manipulati­ons and foragemana­gement treatments predict forage and weed responses.

The project is innovative and complex. It will use hexagonal open-top chambers to manipulate temperatur­e conditions within the plots.

“Using hexagonal open-top chambers is an effective and affordable method to simulate increasing temperatur­es and increasing weather variabilit­y in the field to understand better the impacts climate change may have on perennial forage crops,” Lowry said. “And no one has yet investigat­ed how warmer temperatur­es and winter weather conditions may affect weed seed persistenc­e in the soil. Our project will provide insight into how climate change will influence perennial forage-weed interactio­ns, as well as weed population and community dynamics more broadly.”

To learn how both increasing temperatur­es and more frequent winter temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns affect perennial forage production systems in the Northeast, researcher­s will conduct two separate, but complement­ary, field experiment­s in Pennsylvan­ia and New Hampshire, both of which will use the hexagonal open-top chambers to passively increase air and soil temperatur­e in a perennial alfalfa and orchardgra­ss crop.

The forage management experiment will examine the interactio­n of climate manipulati­ons with forage management — varying harvest frequency and alfalfa varieties differing in fall dormancy.

The second component of the research, called the auxiliary weed experiment, will evaluate how climate manipulati­ons affect weed seedbank dynamics within a perennial forage such as an alfalfa and orchardgra­ss crop, which is commonly planted by farmers in the Northeast.

Research team members include Luis Duque, assistant research professor in storage root physiology at Penn State, and Richard Smith and Alix Contosta at the University of New Hampshire.

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