Farms.com Home   News

Bean Pod Mottle Virus


Bean pod mottle virus can cause a wide range of symptoms in beans from the bronzing, puckering, and green-to-yellow mottling to green stems and reduced pod set. Seed size and number can also be affected by this disease which is more prevalent in fields that are infected in the early stages of growth. Foliar symptoms are most prevalent early in the season and then somewhat disappear as the season progresses.

BPMV can sometimes appear due to infected seed, but the main method by which BPMV is moved into a field occurs as a result of insect feeding. Common soybean insects, such as the grape colaspis, certain species of blister beetles, and some exotic corn rootworm beetles can transport BPMV, but the main "viral vehicle" is the bean leaf beetle. As the beetles feed, they ingest the virus from an infected host, such as one of the many legume weeds, and then accidentally regurgitate it as they feed on the soybean plant.

What can be done to avoid problems with BPMV? Disease-free seed is one option. However, determining which seed source is or is not disease free can be difficult and may make this a mute recommendation. Managing host insects, such as the bean leaf beetle, early may provide another means of control. However, eliminating vectors of a disease proves difficult because other hosts can move into an area after an insecticide application. Perhaps a more reliable method of managing the pest would be to practice good weed management. Since weeds can serve as hosts for BPMV, mowing roadsides, eliminating weeds from the soybean field, and eliminating weeds from neighboring soybean fields may decrease the frequency of BPMV.

Source: University of Illinois


Trending Video

EP 73 Diversity is Resiliency – Stories of Regeneration Part 6

Video: EP 73 Diversity is Resiliency – Stories of Regeneration Part 6

During the growing season of 2023 as summer turned into fall, the Rural Routes to Climate Solutions podcast and Regeneration Canada were on the final leg of the Stories of Regeneration tour. After covering most of the Prairies and most of central and eastern Canada in the summer, our months-long journey came to an end in Canada’s two most western provinces around harvest time.

This next phase of our journey brought us to Cawston, British Columbia, acclaimed as the Organic Farming Capital of Canada. At Snowy Mountain Farms, managed by Aaron Goddard and his family, you will find a 12-acre farm that boasts over 70 varieties of fruits such as cherries, apricots, peaches, plums, pears, apples, and quince. Aaron employs regenerative agriculture practices to cultivate and sustain living soils, which are essential for producing fruit that is not only delicious but also rich in nutrients.