47-3 Agronomic Management of Soybean and Corn by Indiana Producers.

See more from this Division: A04 Extension Education
See more from this Session: Extension Education In Crop Production, Soil Management and Conservation/ Div. A04 Business Meeting
Monday, November 1, 2010: 11:00 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 308, Seaside Level
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Shaun Casteel and Robert Nielsen, 915 West State Street, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
A questionnaire survey was designed to document the key agronomic practices and concerns for Indiana’s two major crops – soybean and corn.  The mail-out survey was sent to 5,000 soybean and corn producers in Indiana prior to the 2010 growing season.  The response rate was 24%.  Two-thirds of the respondents farmed for over 30 years followed by 17%, 10%, and 5% farmed for 21-30, 11-20, and 6-10 years, respectively.  The farm size averaged 735 ac (294 ha) with nearly an even split between soybean and corn.  Seventy-two percent of the respondents were in a corn-soybean rotation.  Relative changes in the planting dates of soybean and corn of today compared to 10 years ago were similar among respondents.  Approximately 33% and 20% were planting one and two wk earlier, respectively, while 40% had not changed.  Soybean planting of 126,000-175,000 and 176,000-250,000 seeds ac-1 (315,000-437,500 and 440,000-625,000 seeds ha-1) represented 56% and 29% of today’s rates, respectively, versus 33% and 54% ten years ago, respectively.  Sixty-eight percent of the respondents planted corn at 25,000-29,000 seeds ac-1 (62,500-72,500 seeds ha-1) ten years ago and presently, 68% of the respondents planted corn at 30,000-34,000 seeds ac-1 (75,000-85,000 seeds ha-1).  No-tillage system represented 66% of soybean following corn and 33% of corn following soybean.  Twenty-three percent of the respondents applied foliar fungicides in the past two growing seasons in both soybean and corn.  Foliar insecticides were applied by 25% and 16% of the respondents to soybean and corn, respectively.  The most challenging agronomic factors were unpredictable weather extremes (~70%) followed by variety/hybrid performance (~35%), poorly drained soils (~33%), and weeds (~30%).  Information gleaned from the survey results will help direct future efforts in agronomic Extension and research at Purdue University that directly meet the needs of Indiana soybean and corn growers. 
See more from this Division: A04 Extension Education
See more from this Session: Extension Education In Crop Production, Soil Management and Conservation/ Div. A04 Business Meeting