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Comparison of production systems involving grain-only wheat, dual-purpose wheat, and canola

Posted on:2009-06-16Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:Oklahoma State UniversityCandidate:Duke, Jason ChanceFull Text:PDF
GTID:2443390002490990Subject:Agriculture
Abstract/Summary:
Scope and Method of Study. This study consisted of two papers. The research reported in the first paper was conducted to determine if a crop rotation that includes winter hardy canola and winter wheat is economically competitive with continuous monoculture winter wheat in Oklahoma. A phone survey of producers that have experience producing both wheat and canola was conducted. Yield distributions were used in combination with cost estimates to simulate expected net returns for each of four production systems: continuous grain-only wheat; continuous dual-purpose (fall-winter forage plus grain) wheat; canola followed by two crops of grain-only wheat; and canola followed by two years of dual-purpose wheat.;The research reported in the second paper was conducted to determine distributions of expected net returns for grain-only wheat; dual-purpose wheat stocked with steers with an initial weight of 450 pounds; and dual-purpose wheat stocked with steers with an initial weight of 550 pounds. A phone survey of Oklahoma producers that have experience producing both dual-purpose wheat and grain-only wheat was conducted to obtain distributions of key production parameters including grain yield and average daily gain. The production parameters were used in combination with distributions of wheat price, steer prices, and cost estimates to simulate distributions of expected net returns.;Findings and Conclusions. A three year crop rotation that includes canola followed by two years of dual-purpose wheat generated the greatest net returns in the majority of 100 simulated growing seasons. Switching from a continuous grain-only wheat system to a canola-wheat-wheat rotation increases expected net returns on average ;Simulations of net returns for grain-only wheat and dual-purpose wheat found that dual-purpose wheat stocked with steers with an initial weight of 450 (550) pounds produced greatest net returns 76 percent (22 percent) of the time. The discrepancies in findings of prior studies of the grain-yield forgone by dual-purpose relative to grain-only wheat can be explained in part by differences in planting dates.
Keywords/Search Tags:Wheat, Dual-purpose, Net returns, Canola, Production, Conducted
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