Southern
Missouri soybean producers will have two new varieties to select
from for the 2007 growing season.
The Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station recently
announced the release of "Jake," a conventional mid-Group V
cultivar, and "Stoddard," a conventional late Group IV cultivar.
Both varieties have excellent yield potential and broad
resistance to soybean cyst nematode, or SCN, a parasitic
roundworm that feeds on soybean roots and can cause up to 30
percent yield loss without noticeable symptoms, said Grover
Shannon, University of
Missouri agronomist and leader of the soybean breeding
program at the MU Delta Research Center in Portageville.
"Most of today’s SCN-resistant beans, around 90 percent, all
trace their resistance to the same source, but Jake and Stoddard
get their resistance from a different source," he said. "As SCN
races shift, this provides greater protection."
Named in honor of Jake Fisher, a 45-year University employee
and current Delta Center superintendent, Jake is a replacement
for the variety, "Anand," Shannon said.
"It equaled Anand’s performance on loam soils, but it has
averaged about 7 bushels more per acre on clay and sand in
Missouri tests, for a mean yield of 58.6 bushels per acre during
five years of field trials," he said. "Jake also has been
superior to Anand in trials in Mississippi, Arkansas and
Tennessee."
Jake has shown resistance to SCN Races 1, 2, 3, 5 and 14,
resistance to reniform nematode, and moderate resistance to
southern root knot nematode, stem canker and sudden death
syndrome. It is susceptible to phytophthora root rot, but has
shown good tolerance to this disease under field conditions.
"It would be a good choice for following rice on heavy clay
soils, as well as a good choice on sandy soils where root knot
nematode is a problem," Shannon said. "Although reniform
nematode isn’t a problem in Missouri, Jake’s resistance makes it
a good choice for reducing reniform populations, making cotton
more productive in the South."
Like Jake, the new variety Stoddard shows broad resistance to
soybean cyst nematode and moderate resistance to southern root
knot nematode, sudden death syndrome and stem canker. It is
susceptible to phytophthora root rot, but it has performed well
on heavy clays where phytophthora is often a problem.
"Stoddard has displayed about a 10 percent better yield
performance than the variety Manokin," Shannon said. "In
southeast Missouri tests, it has averaged 3 to 6 bushels per
acre more than Manokin across all soil types, with a mean yield
of 57.2 bushels per acre."
Both Jake and Stoddard will be in certified production in
2006 and available to producers in 2007. For more information on
availability for 2007 production, contact Rick Hofen at Missouri
Foundation Seed at (573) 884-7333 or Rich Arnett at the Missouri
Crop Improvement Association at (573) 449-0586. These
conventional varieties do not carry herbicide resistance traits.
Soybean breeding research at the Delta Center has been funded
in part by the Missouri Soybean Merchandising Council, the
United Soybean Board and the U.S. Department of Agriculture
through a special grant for soybean cyst nematode research.