Saint Louis, Missouri
November 10, 2004
The American Soybean
Association (ASA) has received confirmation from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) that Asian Soybean Rust (Phakopsora
pachyrhizi), has been found on soybean leaf samples
collected from two research plots near Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
ASA President Neal
Bredehoeft, a soybean producer from Alma, Mo., said, "Potential
yield loss from soybean rust starts to diminish as plants begin
to reach maturity. At this time of the year, when soybeans in
many areas of the United States have already reach full maturity
and the crop is ripe, soybean rust will no longer reduce this
year’s crop yields."
Soybean rust has
the potential to cause large crop and economic losses to soybean
growers and associated industries. Soybean rust poses no health
risk to humans or animals. Soybean rust attacks the foliage of
soybean plants causing the leaves to drop early, which inhibits
pod setting and reduces yield. Host plants infected with soybean
rust first exhibit small lesions that gradually increase in size
and turn from gray to tan or brown. Once lesions appear,
defoliation is rapid, resulting in fewer pods, fewer seeds per
pod, lower seed weight and early plant maturity.
The APHIS Soybean
Rust Assessment Team is to report to the site where the samples
were collected within 24 hours of confirmation. It will be
important for the State to secure the confirmed positive field
and allow no one to enter until the APHIS team arrives. However,
nearby fields should be examined for signs of soybean rust, and
State authorities are encourage to take the lead.
"There are
currently no rust-resistant or tolerant soybean varieties,"
Bredehoeft said. "Research is ongoing, but such varieties still
are 5 to 10 years away. Fungicide treatments currently represent
the only option for containing soybean rust by lessening the
spread of spores. Fungicide use in other countries has been
effective in keeping soybean rust below the economic threshold
of yield loss."
If soybean rust
becomes widespread in U.S. soybean production areas, it
could cause large crop and economic losses to soybean growers
and associated industries. Growers returning from, or hosting
visitors from, rust infected soybean production areas should be
extremely careful that the disease is not transmitted to their
fields.
Growers in areas
near the outbreak should survey their fields to inspect for
symptoms of soybean rust disease. Inspection consists of a
thorough visual examination of soybean plants in the field and
of other host plants in the vicinity of the fields being
surveyed. A 20-power hand lens will be required to inspect the
underside of the lower leaves in the lower crop canopy for
uredinial pustules that are powdery, and buff or pale brown in
color.
As soybean plants
mature and set pods, infection may progress rapidly under
favorable environmental conditions to cause high rates of
infection in the middle and upper leaves of the plant. Soybean
rust thrives on moisture, high humidity and moderate
temperatures. Clouds of spores may be observed within and above
canopies of highly infected fields. Fields with high infection
rates may begin to look yellow or brown.
"Growers with
soybean fields near soybean rust infected fields should assume
some level of infection in their own fields due to the fact the
disease is easily spread from one field to the other and plants
can remain symptom-less after infection for about 10 days,
depending on the environment," Bredehoeft said.
If a nearby field
is populated with less mature plants because it was planted
later, and soybean rust is found, the grower should contact
their state extension specialist, crop advisor, or local ag
dealer for recommendations on fungicide products and application
methods to reduce the spread of rust spores.
In nearby fields
that are not rust infected, growers will need to decide whether
to take any preventative steps, however, this late in the
growing season, there is little economic benefit to be gained
for this year’s crop from the application of fungicide products
after the pods are set.
Soybean rust can
infect a variety of other legumes that could serve as an
inoculum reservoir with potential for winter carryover. In
addition to soybeans, there are also over 100 other plant
species reported to be hosts for soybean in nature. One
widespread host in the United States is kudzu. It is highly
likely that kudzu could serve as an inoculum reservoir for
soybean rust, similar to what has been occurring in Brazil.
"The risk of an
outbreak during the next growing season will depend on how early
soybean rust emerges in the southern U.S. and how quickly
prevailing weather conditions promote the dispersal of soybean
rust spores," Bredehoeft said. |