Soybean cyst nematodes reduce yields and profits while sometimes avoiding detection for years.
“They feed on the roots of soybeans and actually form little cysts that hold the eggs on the outside of the root where the female was feeding,” said Dr. Madalyn Shires, plant pathology specialist at South Dakota State University.
Soybean cyst nematode is a significant pest and pathogen for soybean growers, according to Shires. No county in eastern South Dakota has avoided soybean cyst nematode infestations.
“Our numbers have been increasing dramatically with the last three years of drought that we’ve had,” she said. “The SCN is able to reproduce more generations each year whenever it’s hot, so our average numbers have really, really been increasing, especially over the last two years.”