Pea (Pisum sativum L.) cultivars, grown for their dry edible seed, produce
small and fragmentary harvest residues. The small residue pieces are ineffe
ctive in controlling soil erosion when the pea crop is followed by winter w
heat in rotation. This presents a special problem for pea-wheat rotations c
ommon on the steep loess hills of the Palouse region of the U.S. Pacific No
rthwest. To determine the amount of residue produced by dry pea total above
ground biomass was measured in plots of advanced pea yield trials conducted
by the USDA at three locations in the Palouse region. Samples were collect
ed in 1993, 1994 and 1995 and the amounts of residue produced were measured
. Individual entries produced from 2300 to 4760 kg/ha of total biomass. Mea
n harvest indices for the nurseries ranged from 35% in 1993, a dry year, to
47% in both 1993 and 1995. Seed and residue yields were smaller in 1994 th
an in 1993 and 1995. Residue production and seed yield were influenced by s
owing date and the amount and distribution of precipitation. Despite large
environmental effects on residue production, sufficient genetic variation t
o improve the residue yields of dry pea was observed. The large, positive a
nd significant correlation between seed yield and residue production indica
ted that it is possible to increase seed yields simultaneously with residue
production through the incorporation of germplasm with greater potential f
or vegetative growth. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.