Have you ever wondered why certain diseases cause problems during certain seasons but not others? A disease is a living organism that wants to feed, thrive and reproduce. However, depending on the growing season, producers may see variability in disease presence. The seasonal occurrence will be strongly determined by collective interaction of these three factors: host, pathogen and environment.
The Susceptible Host: A soybean seed or a soybean seedling
The Pathogen: Rhizoctonia, Phytophthora or Pythium 
Environment:
  • Cool/wet soils 50-60 degrees
  • Warm/wet soils 75-80 degrees
  • Slow growing conditions
Below is a chart showing how any of the three can change from season to season or even field by field, which can indicate how aggressive an issue may be. As you can see, disease pressure and occurrences are strongly dictated by the environment. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) can be implemented to manipulate the disease triangle to proactively minimize the risk.
Here are a few management examples to consider:
  • Utilizing seed treatments
  • Genetic selection
  • Proper field placement
  • Rotation of genetics
  • Rotation of crop
  • Planting dates
  • Row spacing
  • Population
  • Residue management
  • Tillage/No-till
At the end of the day, producers are placing a very vulnerable seed into a very biologically active environment. By nature, these diseases are just looking for an energy sources to live and reproduce. However, their survival means the depletion of our soybean crop, which can lead to replanting and lost yield. It’s important to do your research about the potential upcoming risk for the 2020 planting season and take any and all proactive measures to preserve your soybean stand.
NOTE: There are a lot of products on the market that are available to producers—such as seed treatments—that can help suppress issues, but it’s important to know that it is very difficult to protect 100% of a population. Especially if disease population is high, the environment is very stressful and the crop is growing slowly. In other words, in production agriculture nothing is 100% effective or risk free.

Share This Story

About the Author: Todd Steinacher

Steinacher is an ISA CCA Soy Envoy alum and currently supports ISA on agronomic content as well as serving as an Illinois CCA board member. He was recently awarded the 2020 IL CCA of the Year & the 2021 International CCA of the Year. He has over 15 years agronomic experience, currently working with AgriGold and GROWMARK previously. Steinacher has an associate degree from Lincoln Land Community College, a B.S. in agronomy and business from Western Illinois University and a master’s degree in crop science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.