Scouting for Soybean Seedling Diseases
Published: 05/16/2016
DOI: doi.org/10.31274/cpn-20190620-019
CPN-1009
Stand establishment issues due to seedling injury can be difficult to diagnose in the field, since symptoms can be caused by a variety of factors, particularly when wet weather follows planting. Scouting and proper disease identification is critical in order to initiate appropriate management practices.
Diagnosing seedling diseases and disorders
Seedling diseases and disorders are difficult to correctly diagnose in the field. If you are unsure of why your soybeans do not look healthy, please send a seedling sample to your local diagnostic lab before implementing a disease management program (see tips for collecting samples to the right). Obtaining an accurate diagnosis will allow you to determine the best management strategies for your soybean field.
Tips for collecting samples to submit to a diagnostic laboratory:
Collect around 10 plants from several areas showing symptoms in the field.
Dig around the seedlings to obtain the full root system and leave a small amount of soil around the seedling.
If possible, wrap roots in foil to the soil line and crimp foil to keep soil from moving onto the cotyledons or leaves.
Collect samples the day they are shipped. Ship samples overnight, if possible; do not ship samples immediately before the weekend.
Do not collect or ship dead plants.
Do not wash seedlings prior to submiting
Scouting for Soybean Seedling Diseases and Disorders
Figure 1. Symptoms of Fusarium root rot.
Figure 2. Symptoms of Fusarium root rot.
Figure 3. Damping off caused by Pythium seedling blight.
Figure 4. Water-soaked lesions symptomatic of Pythium seedling blight.
Figure 5. Symptoms of Phytophthora root rot.
Figure 6. Symptoms of Phytophthora root rot.
Figure 7. Symptoms of Rhizoctonia seedling blight.
Figure 8. Symptoms of Rhizoctonia seedling blight.
Figure 9. Symptoms of pre-emergence herbicide injury.
Figure 10. Symptoms of pre-emergence herbicide injury.
Figure 11. Cotyledon discoloration caused by fluopyram fungicide.
Figure 12. Cotyledon discoloration caused by fluopyram fungicide.
Figure 13. Frost injury on soybeam seedlings.
Figure 14. Soil crusting.
Figure 15. Incomplete closure of seed furrow.
Figure 16. Soybean emergence gap.
Acknowledgments
Authors
Loren Giesler, University of Nebraska; Carl Bradley, University of Kentucky; Marty Chilvers, Michigan State University; Anna Freije, Purdue University; Bill Johnson, Purdue University; Travis Legleiter, Purdue University; Mark Licht, Iowa State University; Daren Mueller, Iowa State University; Adam Sisson, Iowa State University; Damon Smith, University of Wisconsin; Albert Tenuta, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Kiersten Wise, Purdue University; and Heather Young-Kelly, University of Tennessee.
Reviewers
Jason Bond, Southern Illinois University; Ahmad Fakhoury, Southern Illinois University; Chris Little, Kansas State University; Dean Malvick, University of Minnesota; Berlin Nelson, North Dakota State University; Alison Robertson, Iowa State University; and John Rupe,University of Arkansas.
Photographs
All photos were provided by and are the property of the authors except figures 5, 6, and 8 by Craig Grau, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Figure 14 by Tristan Mueller; Figures 3, 10, and 12 by Brandon Kleinke, Figure 4 by Gary Munkvold; and Figure 13 by Alison Robertson, Iowa State University.
Sponsors
The Soybean Disease Management series is a multi-state collaboration sponsored by the North Central Soybean Research Program (NCSRP) through the Soybean Checkoff. This project was funded in part through Growing Forward 2 (GF2), a federal-provincial territorial initiative. The Agricultural Adaptation Council assists in the delivery of GF2 in Ontario. The authors thank the United States Department of Agriculture - National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the Grain Farmers of Ontario for their support. Contributors to this series come from land-grant universities in the North Central states and Canada.
This information is provided only as a guide, and the authors assume no liability for practices implemented based on this information.
This publication was developed by the Crop Protection Network, a multi-state and international collaboration of university/provincial extension specialists and public/ private professionals that provides unbiased, research-based information to farmers and agricultural personnel. This information in this publication is only a guide, and the authors assume no liability for practices implemented based on this information. Reference to products in this publication is not intended to be an endorsement to the exclusion of others that may be similar. Individuals using such products assume responsibility for their use in accordance with current directions of the manufacturer.
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