With the growing season shifting from June to July, the severe drought began to break apart in some areas of Illinois that then brought on other challenges.
Illinois Soybean Association offering free testing during SCN Action Month brownfieldagnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from brownfieldagnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Oct. 10 through Oct. 30 is the recommended window to plant wheat for intended grain harvest in Kentucky. Compared to last year there are significant decreases in wheat and soybean
Invasive jumping worms confirmed in Peoria County lincolncourier.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lincolncourier.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
April 01, 2021 URBANA, Ill. – It finally happened; your garden’s first tomato is ready to harvest. Bright red and plump, you can practically taste it, but on closer inspection someone already has. Do you dig out the trusty bottle of insecticide? Not so fast, says Michelle Wiesbrook, a University of Illinois Extension expert in pesticide safety and horticultural weed science. Pesticides have their place in controlling persistent weed and pest outbreaks, but using them incorrectly can harm pets, kill beneficial insects, and leach chemicals into waterways and drinking supplies. “We recommend that you use pesticides as a last resort,” Wiesbrook says. “A lot of times there are other controls that will work.”
The soybean cyst nematode, a microscopic roundworm that feeds on soybean roots, is responsible for more yield and monetary losses each year than any other pathogen in Kentucky. It also is a pathogen that hides in fields, with growers possibly never seeing the signs of its existence. Preliminary findings from an ongoing survey that began in 2019 show the soybean cyst nematode is present in 84 percent of Kentucky soybean fields. While some producers will see signs of yellowing or stunted growth in their soybeans, most do not. Soybeans that appear healthy but are in a soybean cyst nematode-infested field will have as much as a 30 percent yield loss.