Ultra-early planting can work but there are risks


The next round of planting began on April 15, which had the same planting population of 140,000. Emergence started between the April 23rd and 24th timeframe with emergence of 131,000 plants per acre. During the last week of April, the weather turned cold and wet, perfect environment for diseases to infect young soybean seedlings. After the weather started to dry and warm up, I did another population count at the results were painful. The March planted beans lost 30,000 plants per acre and were reduced to 100,000-110,000. However, the April beans fared much better with no noticeable seedling loss.
Now, you might be asking yourself why? When the late April rains started the seed treatment effect had probably dissipated on the March planted soybeans and they were essential “naked” compared to the April soybeans, which still had the positive effect from the seed treatment. During this time, I recognized lesions on the “necks” of the soybean seedlings which means a disease had infected the soybean plant. Luckily the population of the March soybeans did not fall below 100,000 plants per acre.
As the year progressed into late May and early June the soybean plants moved to the R1 growth stage. On June 1st, 50 percent of the beans planted in March were in the R1 stage for the 3.6 maturity ground and June 2nd for the 3.9 maturity group. The April soybeans reached the R1 stage on June 6th for the 3.6 maturity and June 8th for the 3.9 maturity group.

Did the SDS damage translate into yield loss on the 3.6 group? When looking at the results, we noticed the SDS damage did cause a yield loss for the 3.6 group. The April 3.6 group out-yielded the March soybeans by 2.26 bushels. However, once we moved into the 3.9 group that was unaffected by SDS, we measured a 4.09-bushel advantage.
Overall, the March planted soybeans provided an additional 0.91 bushels/acre, a positive return. I will continue this study in future years to fully understand the impact of soybeans planted ultra-early.


