6 resultados para SOYBEAN SEED

em Digital Repository at Iowa State University


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Seed treatment options are available to manage various fungi, insects, and nematodes that can damage soybeans before, during, and after emergence. These treatments are potentially beneficial for stand establishment and for protection against soybean cyst nematode (SCN). However, these seed treatments represent an additional cost to the producer.

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The purpose of this test was to evaluate the experimental elite soybean lines adapted to northern Iowa. The 2011 Elite Test included commodity–yellow hilum soybeans and large seed and high protein beans, along with commercially grown varieties released by Iowa State University tested for comparison of agronomic traits. These varieties are used in the production of soy foods.

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Every spring, farmers are faced with the decision of whether to replant soybeans because of stand losses due to hail storms, soil crusting, and damping off. A common practice when faced with this decision is to “thickenup” the stand by planting additional seed into the existing stand. Although this practice is usually discouraged by agronomists, there has been little research done to compare this practice with keeping the existing stand or destroying the stand and replanting.

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The soybean aphid (Aphis glycines), native to China, has become the most economically damaging insect in soybeans in northeast Iowa. Soybean aphid may have up to 18 generations per year, beginning with overwintering eggs on the alternate host buckthorn. In spring, winged aphids migrate from buckthorn to nearby emerged soybeans. Generations advance in these fields, and then another winged migration occurs in summer spreading from these fields to others. A third migration occurs in fall with aphids moving back to buckthorn. Depending on the season, soybean proximity to buckthorn, and soybean aphid migration patterns, populations of aphids tend to peak in soybeans anywhere from late July to early September. With higher aphid populations, the production of honeydew (the excrement of the aphid) and the resulting black fungus that grows on it (sooty mold) may become apparent. Aphid feeding may cause stunted plants, reduced pods and seeds, and may also transmit viruses that could cause mottling and distortion of leaves, reduced seed set, and discolored seeds.

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Much of the soybean plant's nitrogen requirement is supplied through nitrogen fixation when atmospheric nitrogen is converted into a usable form for the plant. Nitrogen fixation is critical for producing higher yield in soybean. For nitrogen fixation to occur, nitrogen-fixing bacteria (genus Rhizobium) need to be present in the soil. If soils do not already contain a high population of Rhizobium, these bacteria can be added either as a liquid or granular peat inoculant, or as a peat-based powder. The different forms can be seed applied or used in-furrow.

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The purpose of this test was to evaluate the experimental elite soybean lines adapted to southern Iowa. The 2011 Elite Test included commodity—yellow hilum soybeans and large seed and high protein beans, along with commercially grown varieties released by Iowa State University tested for comparison of agronomic traits. These varieties are used in the production of soy foods