No-Till Farmer
Get full access NOW to the most comprehensive, powerful and easy-to-use online resource for no-tillage practices. Just one good idea will pay for your subscription hundreds of times over.
Figure 2. What Tillage Practices Do You Use as a Percentage of Your Corn Acres?
No-till acreage appeared to stabilize among No-Till Farmer readers in 2014, according to data from the 7th annual No-Till Operational Benchmark Study.
Some 76.5% of the total cropping acreage for 2014 was managed in a no-till system — the same figure as 2013, but still 2 points lower than the 78.7% recorded in 2012.
About 7.7% of cropland acres were strip-tilled last year, a 1-point drop from 8.7% in 2013. Strip-till acres have seen an almost 4-point decline in acres since 2012.
Readers also said 7.1% of total crop acres in 2014 experienced vertical-tillage practices, compared to 6.7% in 2013.
Minimum-tilled crop acres were at 8.6% in 2014, up from 7.8% in 2013. When vertical-till and minimum-till acres are combined, the two practices increased their share of cropping acreage among readers from 14.5% in 2013 to 15.6% last year.
As for moldboard plowing, the practice decreased among readers from 0.3% of crop acres in 2013 to 0.1% last year.
As for general tillage practices across all regions, 94% of readers said they use some form of no-till on their farm, the same level as in 2013.
Strip-till practices fell by 1 point to 15% in 2014. Both minimum tillage (30%) and moldboard plow (2%) practices were unchanged, while vertical-tillage use among readers slipped from 23% in 2013 to 20% last year.
When looking at the tillage practices used on corn acres…