Missouri soybean yields have the potential to reach or exceed national averages, says University of Missouri Extension state soybean specialist Andre Reis.
Nationally, soybean yields have grown at a pace of 0.4 bushel per acre per year over the past 80 years, according to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. Illinois growers saw a 0.47 bushel per acre per yield upturn, while Iowa boasted a 0.48 bushel per acre per year increase.
By contrast, Missouri yields fell behind, with an average increase of only 0.375 bushel per acre per year. Reis hopes to change that by providing growers with science-based research from MU to boost yields and farm income of soybean — the state’s No. 1 crop in acres and value, according to university news release.
Soybean production in Missouri is divided regionally into seven districts. Of those, yields in Districts 6 and 7, which comprise counties that run from the St. Louis area to the Missouri Bootheel, rose above the rest of the state. District 7 jumped to a 0.62 bushel per acre increase in 2020.