<p dir="ltr">Diversified crop rotations with no-till management are considered fundamental to sustainable agroecosystems; however, associated uncertainty in economic returns may hinder farmers’ decisions to adopt these practices. The research objectives were to evaluate data from a long-term crop rotation experiment to compare economic performance (gross revenue, net revenue, and production cost) among various low-input diversified versus conventional crop rotations. The experiment was initiated in the fall of 2000 with winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) planting and planting of remaining crops in the spring of 2001 near Brookings, SD. Economic analysis was performed from data collected during the fifth complete 4-year crop rotational cycle (2017–2020) of six crop rotations: (1) 4-year corn (Zea mays L.)-soybean [Glycine max L. (Merr.)]-spring wheat-sunflower (Helianthus annus L.) (CSSwSf), (2) 4 year corn-soybean-spring wheat-pea (Pisum sativum L.) (CSSwP), (3) 4-year corn-pea-winter wheat-soybean (CPWwS), (4) 4-year corn-oat (Avena sativa L.)-winter wheat-soybean (COWwS), (5) 2-year corn-soybean (CS), and (6) continuous corn (CCC, treatment initiated in 2017). Corn yield in CSSwP rotation, where corn followed peas, was higher (p < 0.05) by 20%, 25%, 45%, and 89%, compared to CPWwS, CSSwSf, CS, and CCC rotations, respectively. Similarly, soybean yield following winter wheat was significantly higher by 16%–38% in COWwS and 13%–38% in CPWwS compared to CSSwP, CSSwSf, and CS. Overall, diversified crop rotations improved both corn and soybean yield and net revenue compared to 2-year CS and monoculture CCC rotations. Moreover, 4-year diversified systems, specifically COWwS, CPWwS, and CSSwP, demonstrated economic resilience by maintaining stable production costs.</p>
These data provide economic analysis of field data collected from one geographical site for crop agronomic management and yield as affected by crop rotation. Data was collected from the "Alternative Rotation" managed by Dr. Shannon Osborne at the USDA-ARS North Central Agricultural Research Laboratory in Brookings, SD USA. The study was established in 2000 and is a randomized complete block comparing the corn-soybean rotation with some regionally relevant, diversified rotations. It is still being conducted at the Eastern South Dakota Soil and Water Research Farm, also in Brookings. The presented data covers economic analysis performed on date collected form 2017-2020. Data includes crop yield, fertilizer nitrogen rates, crop management cost, crop yield value, total production cost, net revenue and gross revenue.
Analyses in this repository tested evaluate data from a long-term crop rotation experiment to compare economic performance (gross revenue, net revenue, and production cost) among various low-input diversified versus conventional crop rotations.
Use limitations
Data only for one crop rotational cycle (2017-2020) from a long-term experiment established in 2000, from one geographic area.