Crops : publication
Alfalfa is the most productive legume for Missouri. Visit our website today to learn more about Alfalfa.
Reviewed by Robert MyersMU Extension Agricultural EngineeringEmily E. Pullins, Robert L. Myers and Harry C. MinorDepartment of Agronomy
D.D. Buchholz, L.E. Anderson, Z.R. Helsel, Harry C. Minor, C.J. Johannsen, J.H. Scott and Howell N. Wheaton
Department of Agronomy
Successful nitrogen management delivers enough nitrogen to crops to optimize yield and profitability while minimizing losses to water and air. Learn the best management practices from sound economic, production and environmental viewpoints in this guide.
Use this worksheet to estimate the value of manure nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium) and gauge how much manure to apply to corn, wheat, soybeans.
Editor’s noteThis publication is a fillable PDF. Select the “Download this publication” button and save the form to your computer. Then either fill it in using Acrobat Reader and print it to send with your samples, or print it and fill it in by hand.
Robert A. Pierce IIDepartment of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences
Find out what options you have when wet spring weather causes poor crop germination. Whether you replant depends on seed variety, weather and insurance.
Learn four types of crop insurance that can manage corn, soybean and other row crop risk. Plus, read about units you can insure and the premium cost for a policy.
Editor's noteThe following abstract describes a publication that is only available as a downloadable PDF.
Learn the number of days Missouri farms have available per week—due to weather and soil conditions—for tillage, planting, chemical application and harvest activities.
Editor's noteThis publication is a fillable PDF. Select the “Download this publication” button and save the form to your computer. Then either fill it in using Acrobat Reader and print it to send with your samples, or print it and fill it in by hand.
Learn how to make and maintain field borders to reduce soil erosion from wind and water, protect soil and water quality and provide wildlife and pollinator habitat.
Before choosing a forage irrigation system to mitigate drought risk, explore expected forage response to irrigation, equipment options and the economics.
Find government and private funding programs to finance practices such as alley cropping, windbreaks, riparian buffers, silvopasture and forest farming.
Editor’s noteThis publication is a fillable PDF. Select the “Download this publication” button and save the form to your computer. Then either fill it in using Acrobat Reader and print it to send with your samples, or print it and fill it in by hand.
Editor's noteThe following abstract describes a publication that is only available as a downloadable PDF.William ReidNut Crops SpecialistKansas State UniversityMark CoggeshallTree Improvement SpecialistCenter for Agroforestry
Gene StevensExtension Professor, AgronomyJohanna NelsonResearch/Lab Technician, Plant SciencesJim HeiserSenior Research Associate, Plant Sciences
Editor’s noteThe following abstract describes a publication that is only available as a downloadable PDF.
Moneen M. Jones
Research Entomologist
Division of Plant Sciences
Editor's noteThe following abstract describes a publication that is only available as a downloadable PDF.
Editor's noteThe following abstract describes a publication that is available only as a downloadable PDF.
David L. WilliamsDepartment of Agricultural Engineering
Editor's noteThe following abstract describes a publication that is only available as downloadable PDFs by section.
Editor’s noteThis publication is a fillable PDF. Select the “Download this publication” button and save the form to your computer. Then either fill it in using Acrobat Reader and print it to send with your samples, or print it and fill it in by hand.