Producer Partnerships Demonstrate the Benefits of Integrated Systems: Increased Profits and Soil Health

October 31, 2024
In the Great Plains' semiarid climate, persistent drought can lead to crop failures and soil erosion. Augustine Obour with Kansas State University, who received an NCR-SARE grant, is working to integrate crops, livestock, and cover crops to help producers combat revenue losses.

By: SARE Outreach

In the semiarid climate of the Great Plains, persistent drought is increasingly contributing to crop failure and soil erosion. A recent North Central SARE Research and Education grant in Kansas demonstrated how integrating crops, livestock and cover crops could help some producers offset revenue loss and failing crops. 

Kansas State University’s Dr. Augustine Obour partnered with producers to conduct a long-term research project examining the potential of integrating cover crops in dryland wheat production systems. The team found that grazing or harvesting covers for forage can diversify revenue streams while protecting soil from erosion. Now, policymakers are increasingly encouraging cover crop grazing, and farmers are changing practices to boost income, improve soil quality and suppress herbicide-resistant weeds.

As a result, the project is improving environmental sustainability and revenue streams while increasing the production efficiency of farmers who adopt the new practice.

A recent post-project evaluation of SARE projects awarded between 2016–2019 found that partnering with farmers to conduct on-farm research helped validate the project’s findings.

“Most grants don’t have a farmer requirement, but SARE does,” says Obour. “It is very helpful because farmers have different perspectives on what works and what doesn’t. You have to work with a farmer to determine what will work in their environment.”

Polywire fence separating grazed and non-grazed cover crops at Dubuque Kansas. Credit: Logan Simon
Polywire fence separating grazed and non-grazed cover crops at Dubuque Kansas. Credit: Logan Simon

For more information on this project, visit https://www.sare.org/sare-impacts-LNC18-411.

This story is part of a series of 23 case studies produced by Insight for Action as part of a post-project evaluation of SARE's regional grant programs. For more information visit https://www.sare.org/sare-impacts.

For information on grants and resources available from SARE, visit www.sare.org.

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Topics: Animal Production, Cover Crops, Feed/Forage, Livestock
Related Locations: Kansas, North Central