Soybean South April 2022

Page 4

Figure 1. The impact of planting date and maturity group on soybean yield in high (n=5, blue) and low (n=6, red) yield environments across North Carolina from 2019-2021.

Planting date and maturity group impact on North Carolina soybean yield By Rachel Vann

S

oybean planting date and maturity group (MG) are important management considerations for soybean production in North Carolina. A recent analysis of 877 North Carolina soybean yield contest entries from 2002-2019 indicated that planting before mid-May and using maturity groups ≤4 increases yield in high yielding situations. Further investigation into the impact of these management strategies on yield across more diverse production environments is important. The reason is that most of this state’s fields encounter more stress than would an entry into the North Carolina Soybean Yield Contest. The North Carolina Soybean Extension program has been investigating the impact of planting date and maturity group on soybean emergence, flowering, yield, seed damage, purple seed stain, protein and oil for the past three years (2019-2021). In each environment, we have evaluated maturity groups 2-7 at planting dates from mid-March through mid-July. More details about the methods used in the study can be obtained in this scientific publication (https://bit.ly/3tPyr0a). This research will continue in 2022 and 2023. The ultimate goal is to create a grower decision support tool that will allow growers to enter their planting date, and then the tool will generate a prediction on the best maturity group and seeding rate combination to use at that planting date. We would like to have enough data so that growers could filter in the tool by things like yield environment, location, soil type and latitude. To create a tool that is robust, data must be captured that represents different weather patterns, geographical locations in North Carolina, soil types and latitudes.

Yield environments Our current dataset has 11 environments across North Carolina from 2019-2021. Working with a statistician and scouting the trends across individual environments, we have pooled the data into high and low yield environments (Figure 1). High yield environments have a site average >60 bu/A. Planting date: In high yield environments, yields were typically highest

4

SOYBEAN SOUTH

|

APRIL 2022

with early to mid-May planting for most maturity groups (Figure 1). Yields were slightly lower both when planting before May and in late May compared to planting in early to mid-May. Yield declined considerably when planting dates were pushed past May across all maturity groups (Figure 1). In low yield environments, yields were highest for MG3-5 when planted in mid- to late May, and yields were similar with late April to late May planting for MG6-7 (Figure 1). Considerable yield declines were observed when planting before mid-April and after mid-June at these environments (Figure 1). Yield declines from planting before mid-April at these environments are not well understood. But they may be attributed to soil type interactions with cooler weather limiting vegetative growth prior to soybeans moving into reproductive development and seed damage encountered at earlier planting dates. Yield declines at planting dates past May are expected and well documented in the literature. Maturity groups Maturity group: Planting date and maturity group interact to affect soybean yield, meaning that the same MG is not the best across all planting dates. In high yield environments, MG4 and MG5 yielded highest when planted before May (Figure 1). In lower yield environments, MG6 yielded the highest when planted before May (Figure 1). At full season planting dates in May, MG5 and MG6 tended to provide the highest yields regardless of yield environment (Figure 1). At planting dates past May, our data so far indicates that growers have flexibility in using MG4-7 regardless of yield environment (Figure 1). This research continues in an effort to understand the impact of environment characteristics (weather, soil type, latitude, yield environment) on soybean yield so that robust recommendations can be made about maturity group use across planting dates. Read more at https://bit.ly/3Kxfwhq. Dr. Rachel Vann is the North Carolina State University Extension soybean specialist. She may be reached at rachel_vann@ncsu.edu. SOYBEANSOUTH.COM


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.