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From the Fields |
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More than 80 percent of the Illinois soybean fields are infested with soybean cyst nematode (SCN) and fields should be sampled regularly for SCN populations. Those two points were made by Terry Niblack, Extension nematologist, at the recent University of Illinois Corn and Soybean Classic at Malta. According to Niblack, three reasons that fields should be sampled regularly for the pest are:
SCN-resistant varieties do not have the same levels of resistance and there are no immune soybean varieties. The only way to know about the population of the pest is to sample and track population over time. An important word in SCN management is rotate. Rotate crops, rotate resistant varieties, and rotate source of resistance. An assessment of varieties labeled “SCN-resistant” can be found in the booklet, updated yearly, titled Variety Information Program for Soybeans (VIPS) and at the web site. These efforts are supported by the Illinois Soybean Association. In addition to resistant varieties, experimental seed treatment products are being tested for their use in managing SCN. Currently however, none have been released. It is important to implement the message about SCN of several years ago, “take the test (soil test), and beat the pest (SCN)”, concludes Niblack. by Dawn Zuidema, theCity1.com |
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