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Perennial Grain Polycultures: Mimicking Ecosystem in Production

Dan Kamen Food Fiber and Pharmaceuticals Annual • 2/3 of agriculture relies on monocultures of monocarpic grain crops – Soil erosion – Inefficient irrigation – Pesticide run off / poisons communities – Fertilizer run off / , contamination – Carbon released by replacing ecosystem with agriculture / by fertilizers / irrigation, etc. Perennialism

• Most ecosystems are characterized by communities of perennial plants – The Great Plains of the United States were characterized by a tall grass prairie – Perennials maintain root systems year-round • Hold soil together. • Uptake nutrients and water more efficiently (30-50xAnnual). – Why not try to take advantage of these benefits in agriculture? Fig 1. Comparison of root systems. Annual wheat on left, intermediate on the right, at four times of the year. (Glover et al., 2007) Research at

• Founded by Wes and Dana Jackson in in 1976; Salina, KS. • Toward a “Natural Systems Agriculture” • Plan to have perennial grain crops ready for agriculture in 25-50 years. • How are they doing it? Perennial Grain Polycultures

• To mimic prairie grass community, need: – 1. warm season perennial grasses – 2. cool season perennial grasses – 3. perennial legumes (Fabaceae) – 4. perennial sunflowers (Asteraceae)

• Domesticate novel species, or hybridize annual grain crops with perennial relatives Possible Perennial Grains, Identified by Land Institute 1. Warm season perennial grasses: Tsvelev, Mammoth Wildrye (Leymus racemosus; Poaceae) Intermediate wheatgrass (; Poaceae)

2. Cool season perennial grasses: Eastern Gamma Grass, (Tripsacum dactyloides; Poaceae) Grain Sorghum (Sorghum x halapense; Poaceae)

3. Perennial legumes Wild Senna (Cassia marilandica; Fabaceae) Illinois Bundleflower (Desmanthus illinoensis; Fabaceae)

4. Perennial sunflowers Maximilian Sunflower (Helianthus maximiliani; Asteraceae) Problems and Obstacles • Can perennials produce sufficient yields?

Table 1. (Cox et al., 2006). Cox, T.S., et al. (2006) Prospects for Developing Perennial Grain Crops. BioScience 56(8):649-659.

Glover, J. G. (2003) Characteristics of Annual vs Perennial Systems Sod Based Cropping System Conference, University of Florida’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

Jackson, W. and L. L. Jackson. 1999. Developing high seed yielding perennial polycultures as a mimic of mid-grass prairie. Pp. 1-55 in Agriculture as a Mimic of Natural Ecosystems. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Boston.