Maximize Soil Cover
Image Credit: Dan Hagenow Video Creation
Maximize Soil Cover
Maximizing soil cover involves using living plants and plant residues to maintain a protective armor over the soil year round.
(NRCS – Principles for High Functioning Soils)
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Maximize Soil Cover
Maximizing soil cover involves using living plants and plant residues to maintain a protective armor over the soil year round.
(NRCS – Principles for High Functioning Soils)

Importance:
In natural systems, the soil is covered permanently. When soil becomes exposed, for example a tree is uprooted in a storm, or prairie is opened by a wildfire, new plants move in to fill the opened space.
Keeping the soil covered helps:
- Control Erosion – Cover on the soil (such as crop residue or cover crops) protects soil from wind and/or water as it moves across the soil surface. This holds the soil, as well as soil organic matter and nutrients, in place.
- Reduce Evaporation Rates – Soil cover reduces the soil evaporation rates, keeping more moisture available for plant use.
- Regulate Soil Temperatures – Soil cover helps soils maintain a more moderate range of soil temperatures, keeping soil warmer in cold weather, and cooler in hot weather. Like us, the soil food web functions best when soil temperatures are moderate.
- Provide Habitat – Soil cover provides a protective habitat for the soil food web’s surface dwellers.
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This cover crop growing between the corn rows helps keep all the soil covered,
not just the soil that is planted with the cash crop. Once its grown in a little more, it will look like the image above.
Image Credit: Matt Brugger
This cover crop growing between the corn rows helps keep all the soil covered, not just the soil that is planted with the cash crop.
Image Credit: Matt Brugger
- Reduce Compaction – Rainfall on bare soils is one cause of soil compaction. When rainfall hits the cover instead of bare soil, much of the raindrop energy is dissipated.
- Suppress Weed Growth – Soil cover (like crop residue or cover crops) limits the amount of sunlight available to weed seedlings.
- IMPROVE SOIL HEALTH!
- (NRCS – Soil Armor)
- Reduce Compaction – Rainfall on bare soils is one cause of soil compaction. When rainfall hits the cover instead of bare soil, much of the raindrop energy is dissipated.
- Suppress Weed Growth – Soil cover (like crop residue or cover crops) limits the amount of sunlight available to weed seedlings.
- IMPROVE SOIL HEALTH!
- (NRCS – Soil Armor)
Chris Pollack interseeds between corn rows to provide maximum soil cover over all the soil in this field.
Video Credit: Matt Brugger
Our Farmers at Work
Our Farmers at Work
The Upper Fox-Wolf Demonstration Farm Network farmers are working to maximize soil cover in their operations.
The Upper Fox-Wolf Demonstration Farm Network farmers are working to maximize soil cover in their operations. Learn how they do this in the chart below.
To do this, they use