Title: Scouting for Soybean
1Scouting for Soybean
Rust
Lisa M. Behnken
Regional Extension
Educator, Crops University of
Minnesota Extension Service, Winter 2005
2Soybean Rust Workshop Brazil Feb 12-24,
2005 International Agtivities
My Sponsors MN Soybean Research Promotion
Council U of MN Extension
3Equator
Itacoatiara
Campo Novo
Uberlandia
Rondonopolis
4South America vs MN or Midwest U.S.
- Brazil/South America
- Tropical
- Year round supply of rust spores in many
locations - Extended planting and harvest season
- 60 inches of rain
- Determinate type soybeans
- R1 soybeans almost full canopy
- United States/MN
- We have winter
- Spores will need to blow in from the south every
season - Tight planting and harvest window
- 30 inches of rain
- Indeterminate soybeans
- R1 soybeans small, no canopy yet
5Extended Planting (Sept March) and Harvesting
Season in Brazil
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8Clouds of dust filled with rust spores behind the
combines
9Soybean Growth Differences Brazil vs. MN
- Determinate type varieties most of vegetative
plant growth completed by R1 stage. Plant adds
only 1-3 more trifoliolates once flowering
begins. (Photoperiod insensitive) - Indeterminate varieties (planted in most of US
and in our area) plant continues to put on many
more trifoliolates once flowering begins.
(Photoperiod sensitive)
10EMBRAPA, BRAZIL, Feb 2005
Determinate type Soybeans
11Rochester, MN July 8, 2004
Indeterminate Soybeans
12August 2, 2005Rochester, MN
13Why Is Scouting Important?
- Our Best Tool for Managing Soybean Rust
- Prevents us from Jumping the Gun
- Identify the problem early
- Choose the right fungicide
- Apply fungicides at the right time
- Evaluate coverage and performance of fungicides
- Evaluate disease development based on weather,
growing conditions, and fungicide application - It Works!
- Brazilian farmers depend on it!
14SCOUTING More important than ever!
- Most Critical Period is R1-R6
- R1 R2 5 days
- R2 R3 10 days
- R3 R4 9 days
- R4 R5 9 days
- R5 R6 15 days
- Total 48 days from R1 to R6
- Protection time depends on fungicide used,
weather, and soybean growth 7-21 days
15R1 Stage One open flower at any node on the main
stem
16R6 Full Seed Stage Pod containing green seeds
that fill pod cavity at one of four uppermost
nodes
17Scouting for Soybean Rust
17
- Focus on
- Early planted fields with early maturing
varieties - Low lying or protected fields with prolonged dew
periods (overlaps in planting) - Fields with early canopy closure
- Check other known hosts - legumes
- Intensify efforts scout every 3 days
- Continue to scout after fungicide applications.
18Scouting Continued.
- Examine
- Leaves in the Lower Canopy first use stick
- Look for early chlorotic spotting
- Examine about 50-70 leaves/50 acres
- Use 15 to 20x hand lens to ID pustules
and spores released from pustules - Put sample in plastic bag, blow some air into it
and seal. Check for pustule/spore development.
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21Use a stick to push the soybeans back. Examine
the lower canopy
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23Hold the leaf up to the sun. Look for lesions on
the leaf
24Draw a circle around the lesion
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28Put the 20X hand lens up to your best eye.
29Pull the leaf towards the hand lens. Examine the
lesions.
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31What Does It Look Like?
- Symptoms
- Begins on lower leaves as small gray lesions on
underside of leaves - Chlorotic spots- visible on upper and lower
leaves - Lesions change from gray to tan
- Lesions enlarge and form a blisterlike pustule at
center, usually on underside of leaf - Spores released from pore formed at tip of
pustule
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39Early Soybean Rust
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Chlorosis, or yellowing may be visible On upper
leaf surface. No halo
40Soybean Rust Closeup
40
Lesions on lower leaf surface
Photos Courtesy USDA-ARS FDWSRU
41Soybean Rust Closeup
5x
40x
Pustules on lower leaf surface
Photos Courtesy USDA-ARS FDWSRU
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45Rust Spores
46Lesions color change
- Resistant to rust
- Red-brown (RB) reaction, lesions may or may not
develop into sporulating pustules - Killed rust
- red-brown lesions also appear after fungicide
applied - Fungicide Effectiveness
- Red-brown lesions indicate fungicide
effectiveness and if there is a need for
additional fungicide applications - Susceptible Alive
- Tan lesions that develop into sporulating
pustules
C. STONE
47High levels of infection leaf drop, pod and
seed abortion Clouds of spores produced
48Note skips near power lines
49SOYBEAN RUST
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51www.soybeans.umn.edu
52Acknowledgements
- Reid Frederick and Mo Bonde, USDA-ARS, Fort
Detrick, Maryland - Glen Hartman and Monte Miles, USDA-ARS,
University of Illinois - Jim Kurle and Seth Naeve, University of Minnesota
- Marty Draper, South Dakota State University
- X.B. Yang, Iowa State University
- Craig Grau, University of Wisconsin
- Roger Borges, University of Wisconsin
- Jose Tadashi Yorinori, EMBRAPA, Brazil
- U of MN Regional Extension Educators and IPM
Specialists - Eric Rund, International AGtivities