Crop Rotation
Crop rotation is the practice of growing different plant families in the same field across successive seasons rather than planting the same crop every year. Rotation breaks pest and disease cycles, balances soil nutrients through legume nitrogen fixation, and can increase yields 10–25% compared to continuous monoculture (FAO, 2023).
How Crop Rotation Works
A good rotation follows four principles: (1) family break — never plant the same plant family back-to-back, because most soil-borne diseases are family-specific; (2) feeder succession — follow heavy feeders (tomato, corn, cabbage) with nitrogen-fixing legumes (bean, pea, clover) to restore fertility; (3) root-depth variation — alternate deep- and shallow-rooted crops to improve soil structure; and (4) minimum return interval — solanaceae and brassicas need 3–4 years before returning to the same ground, cucurbits 2–3 years.
The classic 4-year vegetable rotation is: Year 1 heavy feeder → Year 2 legume → Year 3 moderate feeder (brassica or allium) → Year 4 root crop. In cereal/row-crop systems, a simpler corn-soybean rotation delivers the same biological benefit: corn is a heavy nitrogen feeder, soybeans fix atmospheric nitrogen back into the soil.
Rotation pays off even when yields per crop are slightly lower than a well-fertilized monoculture, because reduced disease pressure, lower fertilizer bills, and compounding soil-health gains produce a higher multi-year net margin. Use our free Crop Rotation Planner to build a data-driven 2–5 year plan with family-break and nitrogen-cycling logic applied automatically.
Sources
- FAO (2023). Sustainable crop production intensification — crop rotation benefits.
- USDA NRCS (2022). Crop rotation conservation practice standard.