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DownloadSoybean Podcasts
Pest Pressures in Soybean 2009
November 3, 2009

(3 minutes: 27 seconds) 3GP (3G Mobile Phones)
(3 minutes: 27 seconds) MP3 (audio only)
(3 minutes: 27 seconds) MP4 (iPhone)
(3 minutes: 27 seconds) WMV (PC)

Audio/Video Script:

With Dr. Gus Lorenz Extension Entomologist

I'm Gus Lorenz, Extension Entomologist for the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture. And what I want to talk today about is some of the problems that growers faced in the growing season this year in 2009.

This year we had problems with Boll Worms again as we did last year. And we saw a lot of fields in south Arkansas that had to be treated as many as two and three times for Boll Worm.

But this phenomenon with the Boll Worms is one that seems to be persistent for the last several years and it indicates to us the need for us to continue to find a way to sample beans for insects on a regular basis. Fifteen, twenty years ago it seems like insect pressure wasn't that big an issue in soybean production. But certainly with the increase in the cost of production and the higher yields and the better price for beans, it's to the best interest to our producers across the state to take more time and more attention to sampling for insect pressure.

Stinkbugs were extremely high this year in a lot of locations and as a result of those stinkbug populations, we're beginning to see now some fields that were impacted by soybean Green Bean Syndrome, which is a situation where the beans don't develop normally and stay green late into the season because they don't have any pods to make the crop mature. And that situation this year there are a lot of fields particularly in south Arkansas and southwest Arkansas that a combine won't go through the field this year because there's no crop. And I think a lot of this is obviously related to environmental situation that we had with excessive rain but also stinkbug pressure was extremely high in a lot of these fields. And it wasn't just the fact that stinkbug numbers were high, it was the time that they hit the fields. If we see stinkbugs appear at early in crop the phenology, around R2, this is the time it seems like the beans can be impacted by Green Bean Syndrome the most and that was the case in many places in Arkansas this year. We actually had treatment level stinkbugs up to 2 and 4 times threshold before we even had a pod in the field. And when you have that situation, Green Bean Syndrome is more likely to occur.

Your Arkansas Soybean Podcast is a production of the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture and was funded in part by the Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board. For more information on soybean farming in Arkansas contact your local county Extension Office.

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University of Arkansas • Division of Agriculture
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