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    Pea in Rotation with Wheat Reduced Uncertainty of Economic Returns in Southwest Montana
    (2015-01) Miller, Perry R.; Bekkerman, Anton; Jones, Clain A.; Burgess, Macdonald H.; Holmes, Jeffrey A.; Engel, Richard E.
    Pea (Pisum sativum L.) is increasingly being rotated with wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in Montana. Our objective was to compare economic net returns among wheat-only and pea–wheat systems during an established 4-yr crop rotation. The experimental design included three wheat-only (tilled fallow–wheat, no-till fallow–wheat, no-till continuous wheat) and three no-till pea–wheat (pea–wheat, pea brown manure–wheat, and pea forage–wheat) systems as main plots, and high and low available N rates as subplots. Net returns were calculated as the difference between market revenues and operation and input costs associated with machinery, seed and seed treatment, fertilizer, and pesticides. Gross returns for wheat were adjusted to reflect grain protein at “flat” and “sharp” discount/premium schedules based on historical Montana elevator schedules. Cumulative net returns were calculated for four scenarios including high and low available N rates and flat and sharp protein discount/premium schedules. Pea–wheat consistently had the greatest net returns among the six systems studied. Pea fallow–wheat systems exhibited greater economic stability across scenarios but had greater 4-yr returns (US$287 ha–1) than fallow–wheat systems only under the low N rate and sharp protein discount schedule scenario. We concluded that pea–wheat systems can reduce net return uncertainties relative to wheat-only systems under contrasting N fertility regimes, and variable wheat protein discount schedules in southwestern Montana. This implies that pea–wheat rotations, which protected wheat yield and/or protein levels under varying N fertility management, can reduce farmers’ exposure to annual economic variability.
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    Effect of moisture and nitrogen on growth and yield of fababean (Vicia faba L.)
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture, 1984) Buss, David Allen
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    The water use efficiencies of five legume green manure species
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture, 1993) Wright, Christopher K.
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    Nitrogen economy and agronomic evaluation of annual legume-cereal grain rotations
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture, 1984) Speilman, Richard Stephen
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    Forage-crop substitutions on dryland units sensitive to shift
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture, 1956) Norman, Terry N.
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    The effects of crop planting pattern and alternative cropping systems and wild oat population ecology and interference in barley
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture, 1996) Canner, Stephen Ronald
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