Love ‘Em or Hate ‘Em: Last Chance for Farmers to Share Experiences With Cover Crops in National Cover Crop Survey
INDIANAPOLIS—Farmers across the U.S. — whether they use cover crops, formerly used them, or have never planted covers — are invited to share their insights on cover crops in an online survey currently being conducted by the Conservation Technology Information Center (CTIC), the USDA's Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) Program, and the American Seed Trade Association (ASTA). This is the eighth survey in the research series, which began in 2012.
The anonymous survey is available online until April 2 and takes about 15 minutes to complete. Farmers who complete the survey can enter a drawing to win one of three $100 Visa gift cards.
"This year, we are equally interested in not only hearing from farmers who are actively using cover crops, but also from those who no longer use them and who have never planted them at all," notes Ryan Heiniger, CTIC executive director and 4th generation Iowa farmer and cover crop user. "Additionally and new this year, we've added more questions about grazing livestock on cover crops to explore return on investment and the practice's potential as a contributing solution to help rebuild the nation's cattle herds."
Dr. Rob Myers, a University of Missouri professor and regional director of the North Central Region SARE Project, adds that information from the surveys has powerful impact.
"The National Cover Crop Survey is a tool that helps policy makers, agribusiness, commodity organizations, cover crop advocates, farmers and others understand how farmers think about cover crops and make decisions around adopting the practice," Myers notes. "Previous surveys have been used in Congressional testimony, cited in academic research, used by educators to help share information to help farmers succeed with cover crops, and more."
Andy LaVigne, president and CEO of ASTA, adds that the CTIC/SARE/ASTA cover crop surveys help seed companies predict market demand for cover crop seed and spot trends in the use of various cover crop species. That helps seed growers supply the steadily evolving market for cover crop seed.
"Understanding the demand and opportunities in the field helps seed companies keep in step with the market," LaVigne notes. "Over the years, we have seen new species and varieties of cover crops come into the market, and we have identified trends in how farmers have used various cover crops to achieve a wide range of benefits."
Take the 2025-2026 National Cover Crop Survey before April 2. See past survey reports at the CTIC website.