July drought and soybean prospects
This article was originally published on July 20, 2012 and expired on September 1, 2012. It is provided here for archival purposes and may contain dated information.
With no relief from the ongoing drought in sight,
crop ratings continue to drop. University of Illinois crop sciences professor
Emerson Nafziger said that only 11 and 17 percent of Illinois corn and soybean
crops, respectively, were rated as good or excellent on July 15.
Corn crop prospects continue to worsen with loss of leaf
area and poor or failed pollination in dry areas. As leaf color and area
continue to decline, so does yield potential.
"While we remain more optimistic about soybean prospects
than about corn, soybean yield potential is beginning to decline as more time
passes without enough water to keep plants functioning well," Nafziger said.
Soybean plants in dry areas are short, and the size of
leaves and petioles has been reduced due to the ongoing lack of available water
to expand cells. The result has been plants with a narrow canopy. In wider
rows, plants are unable to join canopies across the rows, which reduces their
ability to intercept sunlight and lowers their yield potential.
A more pressing problem is the lack of pod formation, at
least in early-planted fields. By mid-July, pods should be abundant on these
plants. Instead, the lower nodes may have few or no pods set (Figure 1). As
stress continues, racemes above these lower nodes may continue to dry up and
pods either will not form or will drop off.
The yield potential of stressed soybean plants depends on
their ability to respond to rainfall by producing more nodes at the top of the
plant and then by flowering and setting pods on these nodes.
"For now, racemes on upper nodes have a good numbers of
flower, and some pods are forming at these upper nodes," said Nafziger.
"However, if weather conditions remain as they are, small pods may abort. Even
larger pods may begin to drop off the plants."
As the number of "spent" racemes continues to increase in
stressed plants, pod number, and hence yield potential, will continue to
decline. New racemes and pods that will form following rain can help to
overcome some of this loss, but the lack of a full canopy will also limit the
number of pods that can be filled.
As is the case with corn, final yield in the soybean plant
depends on how much sugar the leaves can supply through photosynthesis. When
the supply is short during flowering, pod numbers decline; when the supply is
short during pod filling, pods will drop early or, if they stay on, seed size
can be reduced.
Because later-planted soybeans retain more flexibility in
the numbers of racemes, flowers, and pods compared to those planted early, a
return to better conditions may help the later-planted crop more than it helps
early-planted soybeans.
On the negative side, later-planted soybeans are shorter and
have fewer nodes than those planted early, and the root system is probably not
as extensive as in the early-planted crop. However, if stress is relieved by
late July, it is possible that later-planted soybeans might set more pods and
produce more yield than those planted in April.
"It might seem reasonable to try to protect yield potential
by applying fungicides, insecticides, and perhaps other products that promise
to relieve stress in soybean crops," Nafziger said. "But when lack of water is
as overwhelming a factor as it is this years, it is unlikely that any inputs
other than irrigation will do much to help. While it is important to scout for
and manage pests that can add to stress, there is little data showing that a
crop under severe stress can have its physiology and yield potential improved
by additives."
Full article with figure available at https://shared.aces.illinois.edu/content/july-drought-and-soybean-prospects
Source: Emerson Nafziger, Extension Specialist, Crop Production, ednaf@illinois.edu
Pull date: September 1, 2012
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