Ohio Farmer

Early Harvest Negates Rust

Ohio negative for soybean rust following positive ID in Canada.

November 27, 2007

2 Min Read

As the 2007 soybean production season comes to a close, Ohio and Michigan remain the only major soybean-producing states east of the Mississippi River to be free from soybean rust.

Despite the latest news that soybean rust was found in Ontario, Canada, field scouting in both sentinel plots and commercial fields and testing leaf samples throughout Ohio have turned up negative for soybean rust. even if rust had made it to Ohio, the soybean crop was already in the bin thanks to an early harvest, eliminating any disease threat, according to Anne Dorrance, an Ohio State University research plant pathologist and the state¹s soybean rust expert.

"Leaf samples with soybean rust were found in Ontario the last week of October, and we scouted what soybeans we could find up until mid-October," says Dorrance, with the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center. "None of the samples we collected contained rust pustules. If it was here, it was less than one pustule per 100 leaves, which is about what the other states are reporting. The rate of infection on the samples collected in Ontario was very low."

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Pest Information Platform for Extension and Education (http://sbrusa.net), which monitors national rust development, soybean rust was detected in 19 states and 285 counties from January to November 2007. In the Midwest, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana and Kentucky have positively identified the disease. Indiana¹s find was also only in one field, with very low levels, and specialists did not find more due to the early harvest.

Weather most likely contributed to the spread of soybean rust as far as Canada, but the disease won¹t have a lasting impact in the Great Lakes region.

"There is no threat to Ohio because soybean rust can¹t overwinter. It needs living green tissue to survive and multiply," says Dorrance, who also holds an Ohio State University Extension appointment. "We¹ve already had our first frost that spread south to Tennessee."

Tracking national soybean rust news is important when it comes to Ohio¹s monitoring efforts, even when no rust is found in the state.

"It¹s helping us build our forecast models and our tracking systems, and gives us information as to how concentrated these rust spores are on leaf samples. Such information is going to help us predict future risk, when soybean rust may arrive and what the next recommendation to manage it will be," says Dorrance.

Dorrance and her colleagues have been monitoring soybean rust in Ohio for the past three years using sentinel plots - fields with early-maturing soybean varieties designed to be the first line of defense in identifying the presence of the disease.

For more information on OSU Extension's soybean rust efforts, log on to agcrops.osu.edu/soybean.

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