Saint Louis, Missouri
January 15, 2004
The American Soybean
Association (ASA), a trade group representing 25,000 U.S.
soybean farmers, is encouraging all producers to get the facts
about Asian soybean rust (Phakopsora pachyrhizi), a fungal
disease that attacks the foliage of a soybean plant causing the
leaves to drop early, which inhibits pod setting and reduces
yield. ASA has been actively working on rust detection,
prevention and research efforts for more than two years.
Although soybean rust is not present in the United States, the
association has been receiving calls from growers who are
concerned about the risk of this disease entering the country.
"ASA is a
membership organization, and the calls our staff is getting are
from growers who are not ASA members," said ASA President Ron
Heck, a soybean producer from Perry, Iowa. "If these growers
were members, they would have received up-to-date rust
information on a regular basis through our member communications
during the last eight months."
In the
upcoming March 2004 issue of the ASA Today membership
newsletter, ASA members will be receiving special Growers
Guide to Soybean Rust, which will provide the latest
information about rust identification, the timing of fungicide
application and the modes of action. Only ASA members will
receive this full-color printed guide. Growers who are not ASA
members can obtain free history and background information about
rust from ASA’s web site www.SoyGrowers.com/rust/, and from USDA
at www.aphis.usda.gov/ppq/ep/soybean_rust/.
"Soybean rust
has the potential to very negatively affect the U.S. soybean
industry," Heck said. "With possible yield losses of up to 80
percent or more, ASA is doing all that can be done to prevent
the introduction of rust into the United States, along with
preparing for an eventual outbreak."
There is the
potential for a natural introduction of rust into the United
States that would likely result from spores being carried on
wind currents or storms from West Africa or northern South
America and the Caribbean. Soybean rust spores are easily
transported in air currents and spread rapidly over wide
distances. Limited data is available on how long spores can
survive, but studies have shown that under the right
circumstances, spores can be viable for more than 50 days.
ASA is also
concerned about the risk of human-assisted movement of soybean
rust that could occur as a result of imported plant materials
infected with the disease. Growers traveling to agricultural
areas infected with rust must take special precautions so they
do not bring the disease back to the U.S. on their clothes.
Imported soybeans also pose a risk because they may contain
pieces of plant stems, pods and leaves capable of transmitting
the rust spores.
The
combination of near-record U.S. soybean exports to date,
continued domestic demand for both soybean meal and soybean oil,
and a drought-reduced 2003 U.S. soybean supply provide the
potential for limited soybean meal and possible whole soybean
imports in the latter half of 2004 to meet domestic livestock
demand before U.S. supplies are replenished with the harvest of
the 2004 U.S. soybean crop. USDA projects 2003/04 U.S. soybean
ending stocks to be 125 million bushels – the lowest in nearly
30 years. USDA’s stocks-to-use ratio suggests that ending stocks
will fall to less than 18 days of use – the lowest level on
record.
These figures
have analysts projecting that imports will be needed to sustain
and feed the U.S. livestock demand base. USDA’s January 2004
Supply & Demand Estimates raised projected U.S. soybean meal
imports from 310,000 metric tons to 430,000 metric tons.
While ASA
would prefer to meet all domestic demand for soy products
without imports, the drought-reduced 2003 U.S. soybean crop will
not allow this. U.S. soybean growers need U.S. livestock demand
to be robust when growers harvest the 2004 U.S. soybean crop. It
is not in U.S. growers’ interests to choke-off this livestock
demand in the short-term, or to encourage livestock operations
to locate offshore in the long-term, as a result of
ill-considered import restrictions that are not supported by
science.
"Given the
near certainty of soybean meal imports, and the potential for
bulk soybean imports, ASA is working closely with USDA’s Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) to develop protocols
that will prevent the accidental introduction of soybean rust,"
Heck said. "Last year ASA worked with APHIS to require that
Brazilian soybean meal imported into Wilmington, North Carolina,
had been processed, heat-treated, and handled in such a manner
as to eliminate the possibility of any potential viable soybean
rust spores being present."
From risk
assessment information APHIS has shared with ASA, soybean meal
can continue to be imported under the proper protocols without
risk of introducing soybean rust into the United States. Food
grade soybeans that have been stored for a length of time and
that are cleaned and bagged, such as the recent deliveries
reported in Texas and New Jersey, should pose no risk of
accidental rust introduction into the U.S. Whether commodity
soybeans can be imported safely, and with what safeguards in
place, is less clear. ASA has had a series of ongoing meetings
with APHIS to find the answer to this question.
"ASA is
actively working with APHIS to ensure that the U.S. soybean
industry is fully protected from the accidental introduction of
soybean rust via imports," Heck said. "ASA and APHIS share the
goal of developing procedures that will protect the United
States while ensuring that the procedures are science-based."
ASA is
adamant that the risk assessment procedures for rust must be
based on good science because the United States exports more
than 1 billion bushels of soybeans each year. U.S. growers would
not want other countries to erect non-scientific barriers that
would prevent these U.S. exports from reaching international
customers.
"If growers
want to help themselves, they should become ASA members and help
us in our efforts to get Congress and USDA’s Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) to provide adequate funding for research
projects to develop rust-resistant soybean varieties," Heck
said. "ASA has worked with ARS to identify research projects
that would complement the research currently being conducted."
ASA is
calling for research projects that screen exotic genotypes with
new sources of genetic resistance, characterize genetic
diversity among isolates, and determine the economic efficacy of
fungicide mediated control of soybean rust. Researchers need to
develop genetic markers from soybeans to expedite selection of
soybean germplasm with genes that improve plant tolerance to
soybean rust pathogens and to initiate proteomic research on the
genetic regulation of rust resistance and interaction. Funding
is also needed to initiate a gene marker assisted breeding
program and development of micro-arrays to expedite selection of
agronomic genotypes with multiple genes for resistance to rust.
"When growers
ask me how likely we are to face an outbreak of soybean rust in
2004, I tell them that no one knows for sure," Heck said. "The
experts I’ve talked with all describe the spread of soybean rust
as a matter of when, not if. ASA’s goal is to absolutely prevent
the accidental introduction of soybean rust in order to give
researchers more time to find answers to combat the disease. To
prepare for the eventuality of the natural movement of soybean
rust, ASA also will be working to educate its members on the
best management practices to combat rust in advance of an
outbreak."
For the
convenience of prospective members, ASA provides a secure online
application available from
www.SoyGrowers.com/membership/ and a toll-free number
1-800-688-7692. |