home news forum careers events suppliers solutions markets expos directories catalogs resources advertise contacts
 
Forum Page

Forum
Forum sources  
All Africa Asia/Pacific Europe Latin America Middle East North America
  Topics
  Species
 

Lush green soybean field may not be good sign; University of Missouri specialist says nutrients are in leaf, not pod


Columbia, Missouri, USA
August 3, 2012

Farmers are reporting that in spite of prolonged drought and hot temperatures their soybean plants appear amazingly green for this time of year.

“Green soybean plants may not be a good sign,” says a University of Missouri Extension soybean specialist, “even though the plants appear to be thriving, compared to the brown and dead corn stalks in adjoining fields.

“They may have adequate moisture,” says Bill Wiebold, of the MU plant science division. “More likely, the green results from high nitrogen levels in leaves that have not converted into protein stored in seed pods.”

The plant requires a steady flow of water moving up the plant system from roots to leaves to pods, Wiebold explained in an MU teleconference.

“When there is no water, the system stops working. That has happened in many soybean fields.”

The bright green color may actually mean there will be fewer soybean seeds in the pods.

Without pods, there is no place for the plant to store the amino acid created by photosynthesis, Wiebold said. Usually, by this time of year, the protein is stored in the seeds. Then, the plants begin to fade.

“There may not be a very large fruit load on those green plants.”

Late rains may allow pod fill to resume. However, prolonged drought may have caused soybean blossoms to abort. The result may be no pods for the seeds.

”The soybean plant seems to never stop producing new branches,” Wiebold said. “If there is an open space the soybean creates a new branch to fill the void.”

The node at the base of each new branch contains three new buds for new branches or new blossoms to appear.

That drive to reproduce makes it very difficult to predict potential yield in a soybean field. That is unlike the corn plant, which makes one attempt at reproduction and quits.

“The corn plant has what we call a determinate development,” Wiebold said. “The soybean plant, by contrast is indeterminate. It just keeps trying.”

Rainfall will determine if there is still yield potential.

“It is very rare for a drought to start as early as it did this year,” Wiebold said. “We just have not experienced anything quite like this before.”

“The uncertainty on yield makes it more difficult to decide whether to harvest soybean plants for livestock forage; or, to wait and see if pods develop and seed grows before harvest.”
 



More news from: University of Missouri


Website: http://www.missouri.edu

Published: August 3, 2012



SeedQuest does not necessarily endorse the factual analyses and opinions
presented on this Forum, nor can it verify their validity.

 

 

12 books on plant breeding, classic, modern and fun
 

12 livres sur l'amélioration des plantes : classiques, modernes et amusants

 
 

The Triumph of Seeds

How Grains, Nuts, Kernels, Pulses, and Pips Conquered the Plant Kingdom and Shaped Human History

By Thor Hanson 

Basic Books

 
 

 

 

Hybrid
The History and Science of Plant Breeding
 

Noel Kingsbury
The University of Chicago Press

 

 
1997-2009 archive
of the FORUM section
.

 


Copyright @ 1992-2024 SeedQuest - All rights reserved