Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Management Practices of Growers Using High Tunnels in the Central Great Plains of the United States

View through CrossRef
A survey was conducted of 81 growers managing 185 high tunnels in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa to collect information about their high tunnel management practices. The survey was administered from 2005 to 2007 using internet-based and written forms. The average respondent had 4 years of high tunnel experience. The oldest tunnel still in use was 15 years old. Twenty-five percent of respondents grew crops in their high tunnels year-round. Tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum ), lettuce ( Lactuca sativa ), spinach ( Spinacia oleracea ), cucumber ( Cucumis sativus ), pepper ( Capsicum spp.), leafy greens, and flowers were the most common crops. Organic soil amendments were used exclusively by 35% of growers, and in combination with conventional fertilizers by an additional 50% of growers. The summary of management practices is of interest to growers and the industries and university research and extension scientists who serve them. Growers typically reported satisfaction with their high tunnels. Growers with more than one high tunnel had often added tunnels following the success of crop production in an initial tunnel. Labor for crop maintenance was the main limiting factor reported by growers as preventing expanded high tunnel production.
Title: Management Practices of Growers Using High Tunnels in the Central Great Plains of the United States
Description:
A survey was conducted of 81 growers managing 185 high tunnels in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa to collect information about their high tunnel management practices.
The survey was administered from 2005 to 2007 using internet-based and written forms.
The average respondent had 4 years of high tunnel experience.
The oldest tunnel still in use was 15 years old.
Twenty-five percent of respondents grew crops in their high tunnels year-round.
Tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum ), lettuce ( Lactuca sativa ), spinach ( Spinacia oleracea ), cucumber ( Cucumis sativus ), pepper ( Capsicum spp.
), leafy greens, and flowers were the most common crops.
Organic soil amendments were used exclusively by 35% of growers, and in combination with conventional fertilizers by an additional 50% of growers.
The summary of management practices is of interest to growers and the industries and university research and extension scientists who serve them.
Growers typically reported satisfaction with their high tunnels.
Growers with more than one high tunnel had often added tunnels following the success of crop production in an initial tunnel.
Labor for crop maintenance was the main limiting factor reported by growers as preventing expanded high tunnel production.

Related Results

Caprock Canyonlands Archeology: A Synthesis of the Late Prehistory and History of Lake Alan Henry and the Texas Panhandle-Plains Volume I
Caprock Canyonlands Archeology: A Synthesis of the Late Prehistory and History of Lake Alan Henry and the Texas Panhandle-Plains Volume I
Archeological investigations at Lake Alan Henry, in Garza and Kent Counties, Texas, between 1987 and 1993 generated much archeological data relevant to interpreting late Holocene h...
Caprock Canyonlands Archeology: A Synthesis of the Late Prehistory and History of Lake Alan Henry and the Texas Panhandle-Plains Volume II
Caprock Canyonlands Archeology: A Synthesis of the Late Prehistory and History of Lake Alan Henry and the Texas Panhandle-Plains Volume II
Archeological investigations at Lake Alan Henry, in Garza and Kent Counties, Texas, between 1987 and 1993 generated much archeological data relevant to interpreting late Holocene h...
Thermal energy storage with tunnels in different subsurface conditions
Thermal energy storage with tunnels in different subsurface conditions
The widespread use of the underground and global climate change impact the urban subsurface temperature. Changes in the subsurface environment can affect the performance of undergr...
Study on Deformation of New Tunnels Overcrossing Existing Tunnels Underneath Operating Railways
Study on Deformation of New Tunnels Overcrossing Existing Tunnels Underneath Operating Railways
With the increasing utilization of urban underground space, new tunnels frequently intersect with existing tunnels and operational railways. However, sometimes the excavation and u...
Deformations of Subway Tunnels Induced by the Overcrossing Jacked Box Tunnels
Deformations of Subway Tunnels Induced by the Overcrossing Jacked Box Tunnels
The rectangular utility tunnels have been increasingly built in urban areas in recent decades. In this paper, a case of jacked box tunnels built closely over-crossing the existing ...
The analysis and discussion on ventilation and energy-saving of the tunnels of Long Highway
The analysis and discussion on ventilation and energy-saving of the tunnels of Long Highway
Abstract Along with the construction and development of highways in China, there are more and more tunnels in the highways, and their operational security and energy...
Plural communities on the plains
Plural communities on the plains
<p>This study considers how significant multi-regional processes, such as Spanish colonization of the U.S. Southwest and the later Puebloan diaspora, affected the lives of Na...
LIFE-CYCLE CARBON FOOTPRINT OF UNDERGROUND INFRASTRUCTURE
LIFE-CYCLE CARBON FOOTPRINT OF UNDERGROUND INFRASTRUCTURE
The construction industry is a major source of greenhouse emissions, and underground infrastructure, including tunnels, is responsible for a significant proportion of the overall c...

Back to Top