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Experts Predict Mild Winter Plus Early Planting Will Increase Soybean Insect Threat

  • Mild winter will likely contribute to higher insect populations
  • Stink bugs and kudzu bugs could threaten Midwestern and Southern soybean fields
  • Growers should begin scouting early-planted soybean fields
Higher than average temperatures this past winter affected much of the nation, especially the South and Midwest. The National Centers for Environmental Information reported that February was the second warmest ever on record in the United States, and because of this, Syngenta agronomists and university entomologists are warning growers of expected heavy insect pressure this season.
 
Dr. Gus Lorenz, extension entomologist with the University of Arkansas, recently reported the warmer winter is likely to result in high overwintering kudzu bug and stink bug populations due to lower mortality rates. Last year, kudzu bugs reached damaging levels in Arkansas for the first time. Redbanded stink bugs have also become a more aggressive threat to soybean yields in the South.
 
In the Midwest, Dr. Kelley Tilmon, pest specialist at The Ohio State University Extension, is calling for increased stink bug scouting in soybean fields. In her recent webinar, “Insect Trends in 2016,” Tilmon said the extension service received only an average number of stink bug reports during the 2016 season, but when harvest hit, they began receiving an abundance of stink bug-damaged soybean samples. Tilmon attributed this issue to ineffective scouting.
 
Stink bugs aren’t the only pests with potential to cause problems in the Midwest. Kelly Estes, agricultural pest survey coordinator with the University of Illinois, also named kudzu bugs as a potential threat she and her colleagues will be monitoring for in the region this year.
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