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Gail Ruhl
Department of Botany and Plant Pathology
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN 47907
Email: ruhlg@purdue.edu
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This web page address is:
http://www.btny.purdue.edu/Extension/Pathology/CropDiseases/Soybean/Soybean.html
Click
here for information on Soybean Rust at the Plant & Pest Diagnostic Lab
Search for a Disease Name
LEAF AND STEM DISEASES
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Bacterial Blight
Pathogen: Bacterium. Pseudomonas syringae pv. glycinea
Symptoms: Initial symptoms are small angular watersoaked
spots on leaves. Lesion centers dry out and turn brown to black
with watersoaked margins and yellow halos. Lesions may coalesce
resulting in large blighted areas. Affected tissue often drops
out, giving a tattered appearance to the leaves. Rarely a serious
disease in Indiana soybeans.
Conditions: Cool, rainy weather. Outbreaks often follow
thunderstorms.
Inoculum Survival: Seed, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne bacteria from rainsplash, mechanical
(cultivators).
Management: Resistant cultivars, plant pathogen-free seed,
crop rotation, avoid cultivation when foliage is wet. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Brown Spot
Pathogen: Fungus. Septoria glycines
Symptoms: Irregular light-brown lesions, ranging in
size from small specks to a few mm in diameter. Lesions eventually
darken to brownish black. Lesions are primarily found on leaves,
but can also occur on stems, petioles and pods. Early season
infection is restricted to unifoliate and first trifoliate leaves.
Conditions: Extended warm, wet weather.
Inoculum Survival: Seed, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores.
Management: Plant pathogen-free seed, crop rotation, foliar
fungicide at R-3 stage, plow under crop residue. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Pod and Stem Blight
Pathogen: Fungi. Diaporthe phaseolorum var. sojae and Phomopsis
longicola
Symptoms: No definite leaf or stem lesions are produced
under field conditions. Fungal spore-bearing structures (pycnidia)
appear as black specks in linear rows on dead stems and poorly-developed
pods. Pod blight phase results in poor quality seeds and seed
decay. Seedling blight may occur from seed infections.
Conditions: Warm wet weather at R7 to R8 stages favors seed
infection and decay.
Inoculum Survival: Seed, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores.
Management: Crop rotation, seed-applied fungicides for seedling
blight. Foliar fungicide at R6 stage in seed production fields
if risk of seed infection is high. Timely harvest. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Downy Mildew
Pathogen: Fungus. Peronospora manshurica
Symptoms: Pale green to yellow spots on upper leaf
surface. Lesions turn grayish brown to dark brown with a yellow
or light green margin. Tufts of gray fungal growth may be visible
on lower leaf surface during moist weather. Severely affected
leaves turn brown and drop. Whitish fungal growth may be present
on interior of pods and seed coats. Systemically infected seedlings
from infected seeds are stunted with mottled foliage. A common
disease, but rarely causes significant yield loss.
Conditions: High humidity and cool temperatures favor disease.
Inoculum Survival: Seed, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores.
Management: Crop rotation, plow under crop residue, resistant
cultivars, fungicide seed treatment. |
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ROOT AND LOWER STEM DISEASES
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Phytophthora Rot
Pathogen: Fungus. Phytophthora sojae
Symptoms: Seed rot and pre-emergence damping-off.
Root and stem rot of older seedlings. In more mature plants chlorosis
and wilting of leaves, with a dark brown discoloration on lower
stem progressing upward from the soil line. Root rot of older
plants may also occur. Affected plants are clustered in field.
Conditions: Heavy soils and soil saturation for more than
24 hours promote disease. Disease is more severe with reduced-till.
Highest risk with no-till.
Inoculum Survival: Soil, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne spores.
Management: Resistant cultivars, fungicide (metalaxyl) seed
treatment or metalaxyl in seed furrow, improve soil drainage. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Rhizoctonia stem rot
Pathogen: Fungus. Rhizoctonia solani
Symptoms: Pre-emergence or post-emergence damping
off of seedlings. Brown or reddish brown lesions on larger seedlings
and young plant stems at the soil line and on the taproot. Infected
stems may break in the lesioned area.
Conditions: Stress conditions- soil compaction, planting
too deep, chemical damage. Warm and dry soil prior to planting
followed by wet conditions after planting favors disease.
Inoculum Survival: Soil, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne hyphal fragments and survival
structures.
Management: Systemic fungicide seed treatments. Promote
good soil conditions that favor rapid seedling development. Avoid
herbicide or other chemical damage. Avoid planting too deeply and
compacting soil. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Sclerotinia Stem Rot
Pathogen: Fungus. Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
Symptoms: Wilting and death. Dead leaves remain attached
to stems. Tan to white lesions at nodes can girdle stems. Cottony
fungal growth may be present on diseased plant parts. Large black
structures (sclerotia) form in pith and on infected stems.
Conditions: Cool, wet weather favors disease.
Inoculum Survival: Sclerotia in soil, infected crop residue,
seed. Sclerotia may survive for up to 7 years.
Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores from structures on sclerotia.
Management: Deep plow to bury sclerotia, then work soil
shallow for 5 + years to keep sclerotia below soil surface. No-till
a nonhost crop (corn, sorghum, small grains) for 2 years. Avoid
close spacing and tall, bushy cultivars in fields with disease
history. Avoid excessive irrigation before flowering. Cultivars
with cv. Williams in parentage may be more susceptible. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Brown Stem Rot
Pathogen: Fungus. Phialophora gregata
Symptoms: Symptoms are usually not evident until late
in the growing season. Leaves may suddenly discolor, with brown
tissue between veins and green tissue along veins. Leaves remain
attached. Browning of pith inside stem of infected plants.
Conditions: Disease progresses more quickly in older than
younger plants, regardless of temperature.
Inoculum Survival: Soil, infected crop residue. Can survive
3-5 years.
Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne hyphal fragments and spores.
Management: Resistant cultivars. Avoid susceptible cultivars
for 3 years. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Sudden Death Syndrome
Pathogen: Fungus. Fusarium solani race A
Symptoms: Yellow interveinal blotches, which become necrotic
leaving green tissue along the leaf veins. Leaf blades drop,
leaving petioles attached to the stem. Foliar symptoms similar
to brown stem rot. Light brown or gray discoloration occurs in
internal taproot tissue, while pith remains white.
Conditions: Often occurs with soybean cyst nematode, but
SCN not necessary for disease to occur. Cool wet soils in early
spring favor infection.
Inoculum Survival: Soil, infected crop residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne spores and hyphal fragments.
Management: Crop rotation. Plant as late as possible in
the spring, and use cultivars from more than one maturity group.
Manage SCN. Timely harvest. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Charcoal Root Rot
Pathogen: Fungus. Macrophomina phaseolina
Symptoms: Loss of vigor in mature plants. Leaves turn
yellow and wilt but remain attached. Light gray or silver discoloration
in taproot and lower stem after flowering. Small black fungal
structures (microsclerotia) present in taproot and stem tissues.
Conditions: High soil temperatures, dry weather. Plants
that are under stress from adverse environmental or cultural conditions
are more susceptible.
Inoculum Survival: Microsclerotia in soil or infected crop
residue.
Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne microsclerotia.
Management: Crop rotation, adequate fertilization, irrigate
to keep soil moisture high, seeding density and planting date to
encourage early canopy closure. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Soybean Cyst Nematode
Pathogen: Nematode. Heterodera glycines
Symptoms: Slight to severe stunting with slight to
severe chlorosis. Gradual yield decline over several years. Decreased
nodulation, and canopy slow to close. Symptoms are similar to
nitrogen and/or potassium deficiency. Some root decay. Cysts
on roots first appear as white, lemon-shaped females on root
surface. Cysts turn dark brown with age.
Conditions: Symptoms are more pronounced under dry soil
or other stress conditions. Can occur in any soil type, but often
more apparent in light or sandy soils.
Inoculum Survival: Cysts in soil.
Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne cysts and juvenile nematodes.
Management: Crop rotation for 2 or more years between susceptible
crops, good weed control, resistant cultivars. Avoid moving infested
soil with equipment or seed. |
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VIRUS DISEASES
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Bud Blight
Pathogen: Virus. Tobacco Ringspot Virus
Symptoms: Stunting occurs when young plants are infected.
Minor disease in most fields in most years. Stem terminal will
curve, forming a crook. Lateral buds become brown and drop off.
Brown discoloration of stems, beginning at nodes. Leaves are
dwarfed and curl upward. Pods often abort, or are underdeveloped.
Infected plants remain green longer that healthy plants (delayed
maturity). Symptoms often develop first on plants near the edges
of a field.
Conditions: Warm, dry conditions that favor vector development.
Inoculum Survival: Seed, possibly weed hosts.
Inoculum Dispersal: Vector. Thrips, dagger nematodes.
Management: Virus-free soybean seed. |
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SOYBEAN
Disease Name: Soybean Mosaic
Pathogen: Virus. Soybean Mosaic Virus
Symptoms: Stunting, mottling and curling of leaves. Leaves
may be puckered and misshapen, resembling 2,4-D injury. Diseased
pods may be stunted and curved. Seeds from diseased pods may
be discolored (hilum bleeding). A common disease, but rarely
causes significant yield losses.
Conditions: Cool, dry conditions which favor vector.
Inoculum Survival: Seed. No overwintering hosts in northern
US.
Inoculum Dispersal: Vector. Aphids.
Management: Resistant cultivars, virus-free soybean seed,
remove symptomatic plants from seed production fields. |
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