When surveying the damage in your field, it can be difficult to determine whether a plant is still viable or not. Look for green tissue above the soil surface, this increases survivability. The soybean cotyledon is very important in cases like this; plants with one or more green cotyledon and other remaining green leaf tissue are candidates for survival. Soybeans cut below the cotyledon or entirely stripped of green tissue will most likely die.
If the remaining stand is uniform, and plants look relatively healthy but stand is reduced by 20%, good yield potential may still exist (~90%). Many research reports suggest that a final uniform stand of 80,000-100,000 plants per acre is enough to reach expected yields. If there are bare spots in a field, but the areas around them still have “good yield potential”, filling in these gaps may be a viable option if moisture allows. This technique may damage standing plants, and university research suggests that filling in areas of low yield potential does not increase yields over leaving the existing stand if there are more than 66,000 plants per acre to begin with. When replanting at this point, we advise choosing a soybean maturity that is about 0.5 relative maturity earlier than your normal selections.
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