Clover growing on the loess and till soils of southern Iowa.

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Date
2017-08-03
Authors
Stevenson, W.
Watson, E.
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Extension and Experiment Station Publications
It can be very challenging to locate information about individual ISU Extension publications via the library website. Quick Search will list the name of the series, but it will not list individual publications within each series. The Parks Library Reference Collection has a List of Current Series, Serial Publications (Series Publications of Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service), published as of March 2004. It lists each publication from 1888-2004 (by title and publication number - and in some cases it will show an author name).
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Abstract

Clover commands a peculiar place in the agriculture of Iowa. It, above all others, is the legume that is used by stockmen for the production of cheap protein; that fits into a systematic rotation of crops perfectly; and that undoubtedly is the best legume to use in this state for increasing the nitrogen and humus content of the soil. All of these demands are met by red clover, trifolium pratense. But at the present time, from the standpoint of acreage and value, clover is distinctly a secondary crop. It should be more extensively grown throughout the state, and no doubt a larger acreage will result when the waning fertility of our soils makes evident the need of careful and systematic farming.

Alfalfa seems peculiarly adapted to the West, but it is not as yet sufficiently well suited to Iowa conditions to supplant clover. Cowpeas and soy beans are valuable crops farther south where clover can not be grown, and they doubtless have their place as catch crops in this state.

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