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Controlling the Harmful Effects of Nematodes

According to Terry Kirkpatrick, nematodes have become a fact of life for soybean farmers. These yield robbers might be here to stay, but that doesn’t mean farmers are helpless to control them.

Fields with nematodes typically produce smaller yields and also have problems with weed management. Just one member of the nematode family, the soybean cyst nematode (SCN) costs U.S. soybean farmers over $1 billion in yield losses annually.

Kirkpatrick, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Arkansas, says farmers shouldn’t try to eradicate nematodes, which would be practically impossible. Instead, they should aim to control their numbers so that their harmful effects on soybean crops are negligible.

“We’re never going to eradicate it from a field, and we don’t need to,” he says. “What we need is to keep it from costing as much.”

Managing Nematodes

A farmer’s best tool against nematodes is seed varieties with resistance to these pests. However, different varieties offer resistance to different nematode types, so a farmer needs to know which type lives in his or her field.

“The day a seed is planted in a field is the last day the farmer has to manage a nematode problem that year,” he adds.

Kirkpatrick supervises the Arkansas Nematode Diagnostic Laboratory, which can analyze soil samples submitted by farmers to identify the type of nematodes afflicting their farms, as well as their magnitude. Similar facilities exist in other soybean-producing states.

“You’ve got to know what nematodes you’ve got, you’ve got to know where it is, and you’ve got to know how bad it is,” says Kirkpatrick. “The question is: How many really bad spots with high population densities in the field do I have? One spot, not a big deal. Forty percent of the field with a nematode problem? That’s severe. That’s a big deal.”

- See more at: http://unitedsoybean.org/article/controlling-the-harmful-effects-of-nematodes/#sthash.itAm2h9e.dpuf

According to Terry Kirkpatrick, nematodes have become a fact of life for soybean farmers. These yield robbers might be here to stay, but that doesn’t mean farmers are helpless to control them.

Fields with nematodes typically produce smaller yields and also have problems with weed management. Just one member of the nematode family, the soybean cyst nematode (SCN) costs U.S. soybean farmers over $1 billion in yield losses annually.

Kirkpatrick, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Arkansas, says farmers shouldn’t try to eradicate nematodes, which would be practically impossible. Instead, they should aim to control their numbers so that their harmful effects on soybean crops are negligible.

“We’re never going to eradicate it from a field, and we don’t need to,” he says. “What we need is to keep it from costing as much.”
Managing Nematodes

A farmer’s best tool against nematodes is seed varieties with resistance to these pests. However, different varieties offer resistance to different nematode types, so a farmer needs to know which type lives in his or her field.

“The day a seed is planted in a field is the last day the farmer has to manage a nematode problem that year,” he adds.

Kirkpatrick supervises the Arkansas Nematode Diagnostic Laboratory, which can analyze soil samples submitted by farmers to identify the type of nematodes afflicting their farms, as well as their magnitude. Similar facilities exist in other soybean-producing states.

“You’ve got to know what nematodes you’ve got, you’ve got to know where it is, and you’ve got to know how bad it is,” says Kirkpatrick. “The question is: How many really bad spots with high population densities in the field do I have? One spot, not a big deal. Forty percent of the field with a nematode problem? That’s severe. That’s a big deal.”


Checkoff-Funded Nematode Research

The soy checkoff funds research to help farmers overcome production challenges, such as nematodes and other pests and disease.

The Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board (ASPB) sponsors a statewide survey on past, present and future soybean fields to determine the best methods for controlling nematode populations. ASPB also funds work on new nematicides and studies to identify which crop-rotation programs work best at managing nematodes.

Learn more from the checkoff about managing nematodes, including more tips to control SCN and the link between SCN and aphids.

soybean-field

Types of Nematodes

Kirkpatrick says the three types of nematodes that cause problems in Arkansas soybeans include:

  •     Root-knot nematodes – The most destructive to Arkansas soybean plants.
  •     Soybean cyst nematodes – A problem for many years in Arkansas and the biggest nematode issue in most other soybean-producing states.
  •     Reniform nematodes – A relatively new species of roundworm in Arkansas that has surfaced over the past 20-30 years and mainly attacks cotton plants. As cotton acreage shrinks in Arkansas, these nematodes now feast on soybeans planted in the same space. The effects of these nematodes on soybean crops are still unknown.
     
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