The team conducted experiments in the soybean fields of three Nebraska counties: Otoe, Lancaster and Cass. After hilling random rows of soybean plants at each site, the team eventually collected both those plants and some that had not been hilled. The work is published in the Journal of Economic Entomology.
Depending on the county, the team found R. maxima larvae in 46% to 90% of the non-hilled plants. The hilled soybean fared far better: In the Otoe fields, for instance, 20% of hilled plants were infested, compared with 50% of their untreated counterparts. And whereas that untreated Otoe soybean housed 14.7 larvae per plant, the average hilled plant held just 1.5.
Soybean yields reflected those stark disparities in the presence of the pest. Hilled soybean in Otoe County yielded 3,000-plus kilograms of soybean per hectare, more than 10 times that of the untreated plants. Substantial yield gaps showed up in the other counties, too.
Given that hilling is not usually practiced with soybean, multiple questions remain about how to best wield it against R. maxima, the team said.
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