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  1. Soybean Yields May Plummet in Absence of Rain

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-yields-may-plummet-absence-rain

    August 2, 2002 COLUMBUS, Ohio- Amid high temperatures and little rain, Ohio soybean growers are struggling to make lemonade out of a lemon of a crop, but their efforts may be fruitless. Neither early-season nor late-maturing soybean varieties are escaping ...

  2. Soybean Rust-Labeled Fungicides Not Worth It for Other Diseases

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-rust-labeled-fungicides-not-worth-it-other-diseases

    June 14, 2005 Editor's note: This is part of a periodic series on information regarding soybean rust. The goal is to provide media with the latest updates on the disease and Ohio State's role in research and education. These updates are expected ...

  3. Soybean Rust Moving Slower than Predicted

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-rust-moving-slower-predicted

    June 13, 2005 Editor's note: This is part of a periodic series on information regarding soybean rust. The goal is to provide media with the latest updates on the disease and Ohio State's role in research and education. These updates are expected ...

  4. Soybean Rust Infections Remain Low

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-rust-infections-remain-low

    July 13, 2005 Editor's note: This is part of a periodic series on information regarding soybean rust. The goal is to provide media with the latest updates on the disease and Ohio State's role in research and education. These updates are expected ...

  5. Soybean Rust Development Stalled

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-rust-development-stalled

    June 30, 2006 Editor: This story was originally released on the afternoon of June 29. Later that evening, a new report of soybean rust was identified in Alabama. This story has been updated to reflect the new finding. WOOSTER, Ohio-- Thanks to drought con ...

  6. Soybean Production Woes Continue into Harvest

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-production-woes-continue-harvest

    September 26, 2002 COLUMBUS, Ohio- Soybean harvest, as one Ohio State University Extension agronomist describes it, will be "slow and painful" for Ohio growers. The poor condition of the crop, associated with a wet spring, late planting and a ho ...

  7. Soybean Leaf Feeders Out in Full Force

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-leaf-feeders-out-full-force

    August 3, 2006 WOOSTER, Ohio-- Soybean growers are being encouraged to scout their fields amid scattered reports of high numbers of leaf defoliators making a meal of the crop.   Ron Hammond, an Ohio State University research entomologist with the Ohio Agr ...

  8. Soybean Inoculants Supply Nitrogen Cheaper, More Effectively

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-inoculants-supply-nitrogen-cheaper-more-effectively

    April 14, 2006 COLUMBUS, Ohio-- Inoculants are an effective and profitable alternative method of providing soybean plants with nitrogen, according to Ohio State University Extension research.   Based on 64 Ohio field trials, the average yield increase fro ...

  9. Soybean Germplasm Lines Show Resistance to Insect Defoliation

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-germplasm-lines-show-resistance-insect-defoliation

    February 12, 2002 WOOSTER, Ohio- Two recently released soybean germplasm lines appear to resist defoliation against bean leaf beetle and western corn rootworm, insects that have been known to cause severe crop damage throughout the mid-west. Recent cross- ...

  10. Soybean Disease Could Indicate More Serious Problems

    https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-disease-could-indicate-more-serious-problems

    August 27, 2002 WOOSTER, Ohio- A relatively new soybean disease to Ohio is being used as a bio-indicator to diagnose a more serious economic problem. Anne Dorrance, an Ohio State University plant pathologist with the Ohio Agricultural Research and Develop ...

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