Dicamba Symptomology and Yield Impact on Non-Dicamba Tolerant Soybeans

In 2016, many states saw a rapid increase in acres planted to dicamba-tolerant soybeans.  Many of these states experienced numerous cases of dicamba off-target movement due to vapor-drift, physical drift, tank-contamination and or use of an improper dicamba formulation.  In this article, we will focus on how to identify dicamba symptomology on non-dicamba-tolerant soybeans and estimated yield impact of an off-target application of dicamba to non-dicamba tolerant soybeans.

Dicamba symptomology is often not expressed until 7 to 14 days after application on non-0dicamba tolerant soybeans.  After 7 to 14 day after application, non-dicamba tolerant soybean may exhibit, crinkling of leaf tips, leaf cupping up or down, leaf puckering with blunt tips, upper leaves can be strapped and the stem can twist, swell, and split-(see image below or this follow this link http://ipcm.wisc.edu/download/pubsPM/dicamba2004.pdf)

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Dicamba soybean injury at 40 times less than the 1X rate vs. an untreated check

Dicamba yield impact on non-dicamba tolerant soybeans will vary by the rate, the soybean growth stage and the environmental conditions at the time of exposure.  In general, the soybean flowering stages are more sensitive to dicamba vs. the vegetative stages.  A 100 trial meta-analysis summary indicated that the soybean flowering stages exposed to dicamba at rates of:

  • 1000 times less than the 1x use rate-(“Vapor Drift” rate), showed a 1% soybean potential yield loss;
  • 100 times less than the 1x use rate-(“Physical Drift” rate), experienced an 8.7% soybean potential yield loss;
  • 10 times less than the 1X use rate-(“Tank Contamination” rate), showed a 48.5% soybean potential yield loss- (see table below).
  • The “Tank Contamination” rate, 10 times less than the 1X use rate, showed between a 48.5% to a 58.6% soybean yield reduction for the soybean vegetative, flowering and the pod stages- (see table below).

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Potential yield loss estimated from dicamba drift and contamination

Basic tips to avoid potential injury:

  • Properly clean sprayers between loads
  • Check planting records to ensure correctly traited varieties were planted in that field
  • Scout fields before and after application

For a review of plant growth regulator injury to soybeans visit http://weeds.cropsci.illinois.edu/extension/factsheets/PGR.pdf.

Todd Thumma is a product development agronomist for Syngenta.

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About the Author: Todd Thumma

A Certified Crop Adviser for 25 years, Thumma has been with Golden Harvest and its legacy brands for 15 years. He is passionate about helping Golden Harvest farmers in Northern Illinois address corn and soybean field challenges to maximize yield. Thumma is an Iowa State University graduate with a bachelor’s degree in agronomy and agricultural business.