HOW TO DEAL WITH SOYBEAN RUST AND APHIDS
THE CHICKENS HAVE COME HOME TO ROOST
By: Philip A. Wheeler, Ph.D.
This is an article about options. There will be short introduction to the problem and the causes behind the problem, but the emphasis will be on solutions. Solutions require management and inputs. Inputs have generic and brand names and companies that deal with them. Therefore, I am breaking with precedent from my own writings, with permission from Acres USA, and referencing such information either within this article or in a referral list at the end.
Soybean rust may or may not reach your area, soybean aphids are predicted to be out in force based on last falls “counts”.
The main problem allowing the impact of soybean rust (SR) is lack of available silica in the soil and subsequent adequate silica in the plant. (This applies to all fungal/rust/scab conditions.) This lack of silica is caused by over use of soluble nitrogen fertilizers, subsequent loss of organic matter and loss of boron. Recent research has confirmed that boron leaching is much faster than previously published. Boron activates the silica which activates/moves the calcium, etc. Since calcium is involved with 4-5 protective mechanisms in each plant, there isn’t much defensiveness left. Herbicides also contribute to the problem by killing off beneficial soil fungi and mycorrhizea (symbiotic root fungi) that can make the silica soluble.
The lack of silica prevents the formation of strong cell
wall and connective tissue and protective cuticle on the outside of the plant. Research
on many different crops and fungal types has shown that increasing the silica
content of a plant reduces or eliminates the diseases. Most recently, Jose
Garcia of
Another factor inviting in SR is the natural senescence of soybeans after they bloom. Without generous supplies of nutrients, enzymes and hormones, minerals from the lower leafs will be translocated to the reproductive parts [pods and beans]. Fungi love these lower leafs where warmth, moisture and dead cells exist. Scout there first.
The main problem causing the attraction of soybean aphid (SA) is lack of available phosphorous and potassium in the plant (accompanied by sulfur) which does not allow for formation and transportation of sugars and the production of long chain amino acids. Shorter/incomplete amino acids attract insects to the available food supply (nitrates or poor quality amino acid or protein). Brix is also a partial component of the insect situation. This problem can also be traced back to lack of biological activity in the soil, caused by the chemical approach to farming.
Another valid way of looking at both SA and SR is the concept of plant sap pH. Bruce Tainio’s work shows that if the pH of your plant sap is below 6.4, fungus/rust will find a home on your crop and if the pH is above 6.4 the insects will be attracted. Attraction or severity of attack increases as you move further from the 6.4 in either direction. The pH is determined by the composite frequency of the nutrients involved, so this method is just an energy confirmation of the mineral approach.
The way to “fix” both SA and SR problems is to use sustainable methods of agriculture. Sustainable encompasses all the paradigms from Organic to Quantum Ag. You can use any or all the paradigms according to your beliefs, but the “proof” of your success is always in the “taste of the pudding”. One of the most obvious proofs is the visible confirmation of larger than normal size leafs with shiny, waxy coatings.
Generalities: Stop using those inputs [gradually may be better, but cold turkey can work sometimes if you have fairly good, fertile soil.] that caused both problems. Just because you don’t use anything to fertilize your soybeans, doesn’t mean that the negative stuff you used on the corn ground last year hasn’t carried over. Soil test and replace minerals that are missing, apply bio-activators if needed and start monitoring sap pH. Have a few tissue analysis samples done each year to see where you are. The nutrient ratios in sap required for good health and resistance are “known” and can be corrected to move toward a sap pH of 6.4. Many of you will be shocked to find out how far from 6.4 your sap is.
SPECIFICS
But let’s assume that it is too late to do any long term
corrections this year. So the next approach is to try to immediately increase
the amount of silica in your soil and plant for SR protection and make
phosphorous, potassium and sulfur available for SA. We will start with
silicates. Soluble silicates are difficult to work with. They can only be in
solution with mono-valence ions such as sodium and potassium. Although they
were given emergency approval in
If all else fails, you may need a fungicide. To be effective, both chemical fungicides and organic ones for SR must be applied before you get hit, or they aren’t very effective. Sometimes they require a second application.
Next, we will assume the same scenario for SA. You can only make short term corrections. It is my opinion that SA will be a bigger threat to most of you than SR. Failure to fertilize, activate and monitor will invite attack of SA
Silica may help, but using the same in-row and foliar materials mentioned above to increase available nutrients may be the only way to increase Brix and move your sap pH toward 6.4. Foliar feeding in addition to row support is probably the best approach. Sound devices such as the Veges® Sound Machine have also been known to prevent or stop insect attacks.
If all else fails, you will need an insecticide. I am not familiar with the use of standard chemical insecticides or all the organic alternatives such as Neem Oil or Pyrethrum. The main problem with the organic insecticides is that some may not be too helpful to predators. Therefore, recognizing that you may have your choices for the organic product that have proven effective for you, I recommend a product to my clients called Crop Guard.
.
Crop Guard is a mixture of garlic and yucca. The garlic portion offers some repellency, but the kill mode is by the yucca clogging the feeding tubes. It is effective against all sucking chewing insects. A spreader sticker is usually recommended to keep the material on the plant as long as possible. Nu-film 17, a spreader-sticker from Miller Chemical* has traditionally been used with Crop Guard and was certified organic as it is derived from pine tar. Please check with your certifier as I have heard that some ‘Catch 22” may disqualify it from its previous approval.
In both “rescue” cases, bio-fungicides and bio-pesticides, the use of Nu-Film 17*, an OMRI listed product, enhances the control factor by sticking the active ingredients to the leaf surface, even with subsequent rains. It also contains compounds extracted from trees, turpenes, which have their own “kill factor”
The options above are certainly not inclusive of all known responses, methods and materials. Please do not interpret my failure to mention or not mention any product or company as meaning that they may or may not offer benefit. Please consult the resources listed below. Good Luck and Good Growing, Dr. Phil
DEALING WITH ASIAN SOYBEAN RUST
NATURALLY
By: Jose Luiz Moreira Garcia, M.Sc. Edited by: Philp A. Wheeler, Ph.D.
Maybe that was the reason for me to practice Japanese Martial Arts for quite a number of years and specially Aikidō. From an early age I got well exposed to the Japanese culture
living among Japanese farmers in
But what does Aikidō have to do with Agriculture and specially with Eco-Agriculture ?
The founder of Aikidō,
believed that Martial Arts and Agriculture are one and the
same and his students had to endure long hours of agricultural training from
very early in the morning till
for quite sometime in
O'Sensei had reached enlightenment
after a Japanese military official had challenged him to combat with real
swords (katana) in which he has done nothing but avoided being hit by the opponent's weapon . The
official has given up after finding out that it was virtually impossible to
harm O'Sensei, who was said to be able to guess all
the opponent's moves before hand.
Completely exhausted he went to a garden located in the back of the
training hall (Dōjo) to rest and in his own words
"felt a golden light engulfing his whole body and suddenly could
understand the birds as well as all other life forms". He then described
how this experience allowed him to became “One with the Universe”. Clairvoyance
was one of his many abilities. He was considered a living treasure in
In
But in reality, "Sensei’s" real meaning is "born before", meaning that if one has been born before he/she has a better chance to know any subject because it has already being exposed to a particular situation and therefore can teach others how to deal with that particular situation.
During the 2004 season most the Brazilian Soybean Farmers were hit unexpectedly by Asian Soybean Rust (ASR). Most of them have experienced losses to some extent.
I myself have lost nearly 50% of my crop in the 130 acres I have planted. Some lucky guys
just got away without being hit by pure chance alone. Hot and humid summers seem to favor the spread of the disease that have caused losses up to 80% in some cases in our country.
This year Organic and Eco farmers have tried everything on earth that was non toxic, while conventional farmers have relied on expensive fungicides either approved for soybeans or not. Some of the natural treatments have worked and some have not.
American farmers are in the same situation that we were last season and therefore can benefit from our experience. In a sense, we can become your "Sensei" for the simple reason we have gone through this situation one year before. Learning from and using our experience could be very beneficial and could prevent great economic losses.
Since we knew beforehand that a fungal attacks is not a symptom of fungicide deficiency
(without being clairvoyant of course ), as Dr Arden Andersen has pointed out on many occasions, it made the situation much easier to face..
Some of the treatments are still to be fully tested or have
not been tested enough to see some positive or negative results. For instance,
Compost Tea (CT) which would have been the first choice of a true Eco Farmer,
has the drawback of having to be professionally made with a good Compost with
plenty of active life. In a country with very little understanding of what a
good compost is supposed to be and without a Soil Food Web Lab branch
available, making such a tea is certainly a tough task. Besides it, there are
very little Compost Tea machines that would make decent CT for areas of 2,000
to 10,000 acres and the only type available in the
I am a CT enthusiast myself and make my own CT machines to
cover smaller areas but found a hard time to convince big organic farming
operations to use this wonderful tool. This concept is not well known in
Some organic agriculture proponents may argue that big organic operations might not truly organic in a sense and I agree, but again, I don't make the rules.
In my opinion, CT would do very little to control ASR due to the very unique characteristic of this disease. As you probably know, ASR attacks the plant when it is already programmed to die, i.e. after flowering. When flowering takes place a change in hormones tells the plant that nutrients in the leaves are no longer needed in the leaves and they start to move into the grains.
Plants that are affected by ASR have mostly the same number of grains (seeds) that non affected plants have, but the problem is that they just don't fill out (size). A plant affected by ASR will have a smaller seed and this seed will still be viable. In other words Nature has taken care of the perpetuation aspect of the species, but economically speaking, it is disastrous. Imagine a soybean seed with 50% of its actual size and weight. That would represent a 50% loss, just as I had in my own field. In other words, it is a hard task to stop the fall of something that is already going downhill.
CT can and will protect a growing and living plant if properly made, but CT will have a hard time to do the same in a plant that is already genetically programmed to die. CT works wonders in a living plant that is actively producing leaf exudates, but that may not be the case of a senescent soybean leaf.
I am not saying that CT will not be good to be used before the flowering stage. Don't take me wrong. What I am saying is that after flowering, it will have little to no effect on ASR control. Without CT, what else could be done ?
I had to envisage a way to make the plant cuticle stronger and more resistant and the first nutrient that came to my mind was Silicon Si, commonly called Silica. I used Neutral Potassium Silicate in this case.
By Neal Kinsey's suggestion at an Acres USA Conference I also tried Copper and some Boron as he believes that both minerals plays a key role in rust control as a whole regardless its etiology. (Editor’s Note: Boron moves silica which then moves calcium. Copper is a proven anti-fungal element.)
Some folks here have also included
From the experience we had in this 2005 season, it looks like ASR has a greater difficulty to infect a plant that is well nurtured in terms of Silicon due to the physical barrier and possibly due to the high surface pH. The positive results have been so outstanding that I believe that this non-toxic control technique will eventually be used by conventional soybean growers due to its low cost and easiness of application. Rudolph Steiner homeopathic remedies & techniques that increase the silica content of plants can also be used to increase the protective barrier whether applied through Field Broadcasters or direct spray application.
So what is the best approach? As always, having adequate mineralization, especially
boron and copper along with general bio-activation is a good start. Even though soils have a lot of silica, it
may not be available. Applying Steiner
homeopathic remedies to increase the silica in the plant may be the only
“organic way”in the
I have heard reports from the
Unfortunately, our former experience here in
It really helps knowing your opponent's next move before hand when one is not clairvoyant.
Jose Luiz Moreira Garcia is a
Certified Organic Grower who farms 1,400 acres both organically and
biologically in
Horticulture from
REFERENCED PRODUCTS AND COMPANIES:
GREENSAND: Available in smaller quantities from Fertrell at
717-367-1566 in PA and
TAINIO TECHNOLOGIES: CSI is a distributor – 800-260-7933.
SP-1: Agri Energy of IL. Contact them for your nearest dealer at 815-872-1190.
HUGH LOVEL: CSI is an authorized dist. and installer of broadcasters, and we use the GW Agriculture field sprays in our installations.
VEGES SOUND MACHINES are distributed exclusively by CSI 1-800-260-7933.
GW AGRICULTURE call CSI 800-260-7933 or 972-736-2900.
AGRI-GRO call CSI 800-260-7933.
BALLAD™ is manufactured by AgraQuest, but will be warehoused by EnviroQuest of MO at 1-888-624-2420. Please direct all request for info and purchasing to them.
Crop Guard or Crop Guard EC is manufactured by BioDynamic Earth of ID. Call 208-841-0308.
Soluble Silicates maybe available from Agri Energy Resources, 815-872-1190.