Bean Insights

Low Seeding Rates Can Pay Off in Soybeans

Emily Unglesbee
By  Emily Unglesbee , DTN Staff Reporter
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Soybean populations are significantly higher than necessary in the Midwest, according to a University of Wisconsin study. (DTN photo by Pamela Smith)

ROCKVILLE, Md. (DTN) -- A new study from the University of Wisconsin holds some good news for soybean growers facing tight margins in 2017.

The research, led by Extension agronomist Shawn Conley and Ph. D student Adam Gaspar, shows that Midwest growers have the best chance to make a profit (and the lowest risk to lose money) when they lower seeding populations to between 103,000 and 112,000 seeds/acre, thanks to a bump from certain seed treatments. The effect was consistent across a number of grain price scenarios, from $8 beans to $14 beans.

The treatments Conley and Gaspar tested were a standard base insecticide and fungicide combination, found on most soybean seeds, as well as ILeVO, a new seed-applied treatment from Bayer Crop Science that targets sudden death syndrome and soybean cyst nematode.

Even if growers only drop their (treated) seeding rates to 140,000 seeds per acre, their chances of profitability remain significantly higher than when planting 160,000 seeds/acre or higher.

SEED TREATMENTS

The study included soybean plots from 2015 to 2016, mostly in Wisconsin but also Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and Ontario, across both 30- and 15-inch row spacing, for a total of 26 site-years-worth of data. The researchers compared soybeans planted with no treatments, soybeans with just the base seed treatment and soybeans with the base seed treatment plus ILeVO.

As expected, ILeVO performed best in environments where SDS was a significant problem, Conley said. In plots with SDS symptoms in Wisconsin, it offered an average yield bump of 4.6 bushels per acre (6.4%) over the untreated control and 3.8 bpa (5.3%) over the base seed treatment.

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Across all the states and environments, ILeVO-treated soybeans still yielded an average of 5.3% over untreated beans.

The base seed treatment, which included a number of fungicides, as well as clothianidin (Poncho), a neonicotinoid insecticide, also showed a small, but significant, yield bump over the untreated controls.

In the Wisconsin sites, across a range of disease pressure, the base seed treatment yielded an average of 2.2 bpa (3.1%) over the untreated control.

That yield response somewhat contradicts an EPA study showing no economic benefit to neonicotinoid insecticide treatments for soybean growers. Some or much of the yield bump could come from the fungicides in the seed treatment, as neonicotinoids are often used in areas where their target pests aren't occurring, Conley noted. However, previous studies conducted over the past five years have also shown consistent yield and economic benefits to neonicotinoid seed treatments in Wisconsin, he added.

PLANTING RATES

Conley and Gaspar crunched the profitability numbers in his study under a range of economic scenarios, including $8 soybeans, $11 soybeans, and $14 soybeans.

In the $8 scenario, growers had a 99% chance of profitability planting beans treated with ILeVO and the base seed treatment at just 103,200 seeds/acre. The likelihood of profitability slipped to 87% at 140,000 seeds/acre. Likewise, growers who used just the base seed treatment had a 97% chance of profitability at 103,200 seeds/acre, and 70% at 140,000 seeds/acre.

In contrast, growers using untreated seed would have to push populations to 120,000 seeds/acre to reach a 99% chance of profitability.

That trend continued in the $11 scenario, where ILeVO plus the base seed treatment resulted in a 99% chance of profitability at 112,000 seeds/acre, which dropped only slightly to 98% at 140 seeds/acre. The base seed treatment resulted in a 96% chance of profitability at 112,000 seeds/acre and an 85% chance at 140,000 seeds/acre. (Untreated seed in this scenario still required 120,000 seeds/acre to hit 99%.)

For Conley, the take-away for soybean growers is that tools for profitability are available to growers, even in a low-price commodity scenario.

"I'm encouraging growers in the Midwest to buy a bag an acre, or 140,000 seeds/acre," he said. "And then -- if you have a prescription planter -- steal from the good areas, say 20,000 seeds/acre, and put some of that seed in the bad areas, such as droughty parts of the field. That's a quick and dirty way of doing prescription seeding rate based on what our data is showing."

Keep your disease history in mind, as you go, he added. "If you have a history of SDS, I would consider using ILeVO, even at $8 beans, and drop your seeding rate at least to 140,000 or 130,000 seeds/acre."

See the study results here: http://bit.ly/….

Emily Unglesbee can be reached at Emily.unglesbee@dtn.com

Follow Emily Unglesbee on Twitter @Emily_Unglesbee

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Emily Unglesbee