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Here’s a look at the top pathogens, pests and weeds affecting soybean production.
One “rural legend” is that when planting corn-on-corn, the big hit on yield is reduced in the second year and then goes away. Not true, says a plant physiologist.
The damage left by above-average rainfall is now showing up in wheat fields.
Flood damage to winter wheat is starting to show up in parts of the Midwest, and in some cases sections of, or entire fields are likely to perish.
When hail damage occurs early in the season, yield loss many not directly be as detrimental as you first think.
About half of Kansas—the nation’s top producer of winter wheat—is now suffering from severe or extreme drought, up from less than 20% two weeks earlier
The abnormally wet spring in the Eastern Corn Belt has not only hampered planting, but it also has prevented timely weed burndown applications.
Here’s a spreadsheet to help farmers evaluate the decision to accept a prevented planting payment or plant corn after the crop insurance deadline.
With wheat harvest a few weeks away, here is some advice for farmers that will double-crop soybeans.
How a disease changed an industry.
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