Cover crops are plants without economic value grown outside of typical crop seasons for the primary purpose of land protection. This achieves a few measurable soil improvements: erosion reduction, weed suppression, soil fertility (organic matter), and improved water infiltration. A portion of these changes translate into advanced carbon sequestration, an additional unobservable but no less valuable benefit. These combined effects have major economic considerations, as well, with cover crops globally viewed as tools that increase productivity, stabilize (and sometimes boost) yields, and improve income resilience in spite of climatic pressure. When cover crops are used with completely separate production techniques such as zero or conservation tillage or precision input use, the conclusions about field improvements in subsequent yields are stronger.
Depending on the combination of species used (which is itself regionally dependent), cover crops can also be a source of nitrogen that, later in the cash crop growing season, may reduce nitrogen inputs required. This nitrogen impact is contested depending on the field in which they are used and the timing of planting. For example, repeated cereal-legume mixtures in prairie crop systems perform similarly to other conservation methods in regard to soil health and moisture retention whereas their employment in eastern broccoli fields had no impact on nitrogen loss (i.e. emissions) or the quantity of supplemental inputs are required. This is an example of a regenerative practice (cover crops building soil health) requiring targeted, conventional inputs (additional nitrogen fertilizers) to remain profitable.
There is also strong evidence of the role cover crops (especially a variety of plant types sometimes referred to as a cocktail) play in Canada’s biodiversity strategy. Not only does a spread of cover crop types cause its own plant-based biodiversity, but surrounding insect species also diversify in response. Some arthropods prefer flowering plants and others prefer densely foliage coverage; some insects hate certain species of crop, encouraging natural protection. This type of interaction is observed in Quebec when alyssum flowers are used near lettuce fields, drawing the attention of predatory insects away from the cash crop in favour of the cover crop, or with brown mustard in winter potato fields that provide a distraction for wireworms. In instances of increased competition with weeds or pests, targeted cover crop selection can reduce the need for chemical management (herbicides, insecticides), although cover crops will not eliminate their use entirely.