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Results From 2016 SDS Cover Crop X Seed Treatment Trial Available

By Angie Peltier 
 
Figure. Symptoms of sudden death syndrome (SDS) beginning to appear in Western Illinois soybeans. Yellowing and browning of the tissue between leaf veins is one symptom that can help in diagnosis.
 
One commonality among people is that topics of curiosity are often shared with others. Sometimes these anecdotes can reveal topics that are in need of further study. 
 
The 2015 growing season was one that favored sudden death syndrome (SDS) in soybean, which tended to be quite severe in some areas of western Illinois. One anecdote was passed along to me by Mr. Mike Roegge, a now retired Educator with University of Illinois Extension that lives and works in Adams County. Mike heard from a couple of people that they tended to see lower SDS disease severity in those fields that had had a cereal rye cover crop earlier that spring. These anecdotes were real and based upon real observations, but hadn't resulted from replicated, randomized research trials. This is where we came in.
 
In the fall of 2015 personnel at the Northwestern Illinois Agricultural Research and Demonstration Center in Monmouth seeded a winter cover crop - cereal rye - at a rate of 90 lb/A with a no-till drill. Large swaths of cover crop plots were established, overwintered and were terminated using herbicides during the spring of 2016. Into these larger blocks, smaller plots were established and included the following four treatments: cover crop plots planted to either bare seed or seed treated with ILeVO (a.i.: fluopyram: Bayer Crop Science) and plots that had had no winter cover crop and were planted to either bare seed or seed treated with ILeVO. There were a total of eight replications. 
 
Further information about data collection and analysis and the results of this experiment are available here.
 

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Grain Market Outlook Price Prospects for 2024

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Joe Janzen and Scott Irwin of the University of Illinois provided an in-depth analysis of the grain market outlook for 2024, including price forecasts, global supply and demand trends, and marketing implications for corn and soybean producers.

Key topics covered:

Review of 2023/24 USDA February WASDE report results Old and new crop corn and soybean balance sheet forecasts Export sales pace comparisons to previous years South American soybean production estimates Impact of input costs and interest rates on marketing Benchmarking farm-level marketing performance As grain prices face downward pressure in 2024, the presenters emphasized the importance of having an active marketing plan in place, rather than a 'store and ignore' approach. They provided insight into strategies for forward contracting, making new crop sales, and capturing opportunities in a volatile market environment.

Overall, an excellent webinar reviewing the latest market analysis and offering actionable strategies for crop producers facing a more challenging economic climate this year.