Soybean Disease ID Workshop First of Several to be Held This Year
2/8/2012
CUSTAR, Ohio -- Ohio crop growers, seed company agronomists,
retailers and other agriculture professionals will spend time up close and
personal with diseased soybeans during a workshop held by Ohio State University
experts that offers in-depth training on fungicide application, genetic
resistance thresholds and other information related to soybean disease.
The goal is to provide participants the opportunity for hands-on identification
of live plant diseases in order to better prepare them for disease
identification in the fields this year, said Alan Sundermeier, an Ohio State University
Extension educator who is among a group of Ohio State experts to offer the
workshop Feb. 14 at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center’s Northwest Agricultural Research Station.
The workshop is the first in a
series to be held this year designed to offer hands-on
identification of live plant diseases, Sundermeier said. While the Feb. 14
workshop is full, subsequent workshops on the issue will be held throughout the
spring, summer and fall based on the popularity of the issue with agriculture
professionals, he said.
The soybean workshops will include presentations on Ohio
State soybean population research, using cereal rye cover crops, cultural
practices to improve yield, northwest Ohio soybean diseases, genetic
disease resistance, thresholds and fungicide use, and future soybean
disease issues. There will also be a hands-on soybean disease
identification session.
“The success of this workshop will lead to offering more
workshops throughout the state,” Sundermeier said. “The workshops use plants
grown in a greenhouse to allow participants to view the plants up close to look
at the disease symptoms.
“It’s one thing to see a photo of a diseased plant but it’s another
thing to hold it and inspect it. That will lead to better identification next
summer in the fields.”
Hands-on demonstrations will help growers make better
decisions on their farms when faced with these challenges, said Anne Dorrance,
a plant pathologist with joint appointments with OSU Extension and OARDC, who
will talk about genetic disease resistance, pathogen biology and thresholds,
and fungicide use during the workshop.
“The science is
changing and the industry is changing, just like any other career,” she said. “So
growers and other agriculture professionals have to keep up-to-date with what
is changing as well.”
The soybean workshops that will be held in the spring,
summer and fall will likely use plants that are grown in greenhouses as well as
include live demonstrations in the field, Sundermeier said.
The dates have not yet been finalized for the remaining
workshops, he said.
For more information on fungicide application, genetic
resistance thresholds and other information related to soybean disease,
individuals can call Alan Sundermeier at 419-354-9050, or contact him through
email at sundermeier.5@osu.edu. Individuals
can also call Anne Dorrance at 330-202-3560 or contact her through email at dorrance.1@osu.edu.
Writers
Tracy
Turner
turner.490@osu.edu
614-688-1067
Sources
Alan P. Sundermeier
419-354-9050
sundermeier.5@osu.edu
Writer:
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