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Updated: October 23, 2024
Scouting For Podworms
It's time to start scouting for podworms (
Helicoverpa zea
) in double-crop soybeans. There have been reports of high numbers of small and young pod worms and soybean loopers in double-crop soybean on the Delmarva. Podworms prefer fields that are flowering, open canopy, and stressed and have been recently sprayed with a non-selective insecticide. Their population can be spotty, so one field can be high while the field next to it is low, so the only way to know what is happening in a particular field is to sample it. You can sample for podworms using either a sweep net or drop cloth.
Updated: October 23, 2024
August IPM Insect Scouting Tips
August IPM insect scouting tips on soybean, field corn, and sorghum.
Updated: October 23, 2024
September IPM Insect Scouting Tips
Soybeans: Continue scouting for corn earworm, stink bugs, and soybean looper in double-crop fields. Defoliation thresholds at R5 are 15% and between 20 and 30% at R6. Corn earworm pheromone trapping information for Maryland can be found at https://extension.umd.edu/resource/corn-earworm-pheromone-trapping. NC State Extension has a good CEW threshold calculator can be used to help decide if it is worth treating: https://www.ces.ncsu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/CEW-calculator-v0.006.html. Stink bug thresholds are 5 bugs per 15 sweeps until the soybeans reach the R7 stage, after which treatment for stink bugs is not necessary.
Updated: October 22, 2024
Agronomy News-April 2021
Agronomy News is a statewide newsletter for farmers, consultants, researchers, and educators interested in grain and row crop forage production systems. The topic for this edition is Cost-Share Grants Expanded, Evaluating Wheat Stands, Fusarium Head Blight Management, Early-Season Wheat Disease Scouting, April IPM Insect Scouting Tips, Cover Crop Termination for 2021, Maryland Circuit Court Judge Reverses Final Maryland AFO Permit, Maryland Ag Land Preservation, Pesticide Disposal Program, Pesticide Recertification Workbook, US Corn & Soybean Planting Acreage Report, Cooperators Needed For On-Farm Nitrogen Trials, What To Do With Thinning Alfalfa Stands, Weather Outlook, and Regional Crop Reports.
Updated: October 22, 2024
Soybean Fungicide Trials, 2021
2021 soybean fungicide trial results
Updated: October 22, 2024
Agronomy News-June 2024
Agronomy Newsletter -June 2024, Volume 15, Issue 3. Topics include: State Court of Appeals Overturns Circuit Court’s Right-to-Farm Decision, Thoughts on Tar Spot Management, Scouting for Fusarium Head Blight, Paraquat Training Opportunities, June IPM Insect Scouting Tips, UMD Faculty Member Partners Nationally to Release Highly Anticipated Decision Aid Tool to Produce Maximum Crop Yield, New Forage Enterprise Budgets, Fungicide Efficacy Tables for Corn and Soybean, Weather Outlook, and Maryland Regional Crop Reports.
Updated: October 22, 2024
2023 Maryland Soybean Fungicide Trials
2023 Maryland Soybean Fungicide Trial results
Updated: October 22, 2024
Agronomy News-May 2021
Agronomy News is a statewide newsletter for farmers, consultants, researchers, and educators interested in grain and row crop forage production systems. The topics for this edition are
Updated: October 22, 2024
Symptoms of Stem Diseases Developing in Soybean
As soybeans begin the pod fill growth stages, heat and drought stresses can trigger the development of many disease symptoms. Currently we are seeing many instances of stem diseases in soybean. Many pathogens are associated with stem diseases in soybean, and many produce very similar foliar symptoms, which is why diagnosis from foliar symptoms alone typically leads to a misdiagnosis. Submit questionable samples to the UMD Plant Diagnostic Lab for proper identification. Common soybean stem diseases and their symptoms/signs are outlined below.
Updated: October 21, 2024
Effect of Foliar Fungicides on Frogeye Leaf Spot in Three Maryland Geographies in 2022
Trials were established at the Wye Research and Education Center in Queenstown, MD (WYE), Central Maryland Research and Education Center in Ellicott City, MD (CMREC), and Western Maryland Research and Education Center in Keedysville, MD (WMREC) in 2022 to assess the efficacy of select fungicides for the suppression of soybean foliar diseases.
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