Cost of production comparisons
In the search for a third
crop to bring profits as well as diversity to Iowa’s
two-crop system, one new crop has surfaced as a worthy
candidate: field peas.
A project launched in 2004 by the Leopold Center’s
Ecology Initiative is demonstrating favorable economics
for farmers who also raise hogs. Field peas are a
short-season crop that can be grown either after a wheat
crop or before a late planting of soybean. Peas are used
in other parts of the world as food for pigs as well as
in human diets.
“It’s hard to put an exact value on what it’s worth for
you to grow field peas, kind of like hay crops, but we
thought that if we could save producers $2 a ton in
livestock rations, that it would be economical for them
to grow double-cropped peas with some other crop in
their rotation,” said Tom Miller, Iowa State University
Extension livestock specialist based in Washington
County in southeast Iowa. Producers also would see other
benefits of longer rotations such as increased
ecological diversity to break insect and pest cycles.
“One of the nice things for swine producers is that they
always have an empty bin in June or July, when fall- and
spring-planted peas are harvested, so they can make good
use of their bin space,” he added. “By the time they
need their bins again in the fall, they’ll have used the
peas and emptied the bins.”
Miller is working with ISU Extension crop specialist Jim
Fawcett, who is based in nearby Johnson County. Together
they are growing different varieties of field peas in
several rotations and locations, and using them in swine
feeding trials. Their most recent trial was for 1,200
grow-to-finish pigs raised by a large hog producer in
Washington County. The project is funded by a three-year
Leopold Center grant, matched by USDA-SARE funds.
Peas good source of protein for pigs
For the experiment, the pigs were divided into six
groups – two as a control, two fed one variety of field
pea ration and two fed a second variety of field peas.
The researchers replaced roughly 400 pounds of corn and
200 pounds of soybean meal with 600 pounds of field
peas. Rations were balanced for nutritional needs of
pigs at various weights and adjusted appropriately for
protein and energy.
Miller said each pig was weighed individually four times
between September 2005 and January 2006 to determine
performance. Each pig in the experimental groups
consumed an average of 186 pounds of field peas, 260
pounds of corn and 60 pounds of soybean meal, at a per
pig feed savings of 67 cents. They estimated a market
price for field peas at $3.50 a bushel.
“We saw no differences in the average daily gain in pigs
fed a ration that included field peas,” Miller said. “In
fact, when considering feed efficiency the pigs
performed as good as or better on those diets than on
the conventional rations.”
A field day in mid-June attracted an audience of about a
dozen local growers. The event was held at a 20-acre
field that had just finished blooming on a private farm
near Amana. The field was harvested in early July,
followed by an early-maturing soybean variety. Another
planting option being investigated is early maturing
milo for swine rations.
“There’s really no special equipment needed to grow this
crop,” said Fawcett as he walked through field peas,
which stood about 30 inches high. “We planted April 5,
but last year we planted in the snow in mid-March.
They’ll come up as soon as the ground gets to 40
degrees.”
Research focuses on best rotation
Fawcett said they are experimenting with both spring-
and fall-planted peas. He said peas in one field planted
in October grew about twice as tall as the
spring-planted peas, and yielded about five bushels per
acre more than the spring-planted peas. He said he had
hoped that fall-planted peas could be harvested a week
or two sooner than spring-planted peas, but this year
they both matured at about the same time.
Fawcett said yields on various plots throughout
southeast Iowa averaged 30 to 55 bushels per acre in
2005. Yields in 2006 have averaged about 25 bushels per
acre. The lower yields in 2006 may be partly due to the
later planting date in 2006, and also because of very
hot weather in late May when the peas were flowering.
He said chemicals can be used to control weeds, but
late-emerging weeds such as waterhemp have not been much
of a problem in spring-planted peas. However, waterhemp
has been a challenge when the peas are planted in July
after a winter wheat harvest. A legume, field peas fix
nitrogen for the following crop, which reduces input
needs. Peas also can break the insect and pest cycle in
the typical corn-soybean rotation.
Two other positive aspects of field peas: the crop is
eligible for loan deficiency payments and it is
harvested in the summer, about the time when the price
for soybean meal usually peaks.
“I’m amazed at the people who’ve approached us on this
because it’s been all up and down the scale from small,
organic farmers to very large producers who market
10,000 pigs every year,” Miller said.
He said that large hog producers often plant wheat just
for a place to apply manure during summer months. Small
producers also plant wheat for its high-quality straw,
which is used as livestock bedding in hoop barns. In
either case, he noted the addition of a crop of field
peas can increase profitability because the crop can be
fed to hogs with no further processing.