4.7 Article

Individual and Combined Effects of Planting Date, Seeding Rate, Relative Maturity, and Row Spacing on Soybean Yield

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy11030605

Keywords

seed yield; soybean; canopy cover; crop production

Funding

  1. North Central Soybean Research Program through the `Boots on the Ground: Validation of Benchmarking Process through an Integrated OnFarm Partnership' project
  2. North Dakota State University Agricultural Experiment Station

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Planting date, seeding rate, relative maturity, and row spacing are key factors affecting soybean yield. Maximizing canopy cover before flowering improves seed yield. Combining early planting, optimum cultivars, high seeding rate, and narrow row spacing can significantly increase yield and profit compared to conventional practices.
Planting date (PD), seeding rate (SR), relative maturity (RM) of cultivars, and row spacing (RS) are primary management factors affecting soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) yield. The individual and synergistic effects of PD, SR, RM, and RS on seed yield and agronomic characteristics in North Dakota were herein investigated. Early and late PD, early and late RM cultivars, two SR (408,000 and 457,000 seed ha(-1)), and two RS (30.5 and 61 cm) were evaluated in four total environments in 2019 and 2020. Maximizing green canopy cover prior to the beginning of flowering improved seed yield. Individual factors of early PD and narrow RS resulted in yield increase of 311 and 266 kg ha(-1), respectively. The combined factors of early PD, late RM, high SR, and narrow RS improved yield by 26% and provided a $350 ha(-1) partial profit over conventional practices. Canopy cover and yield had relatively weak relationships with r(2) of 0.36, 0.23, 0.14, and 0.21 at the two trifoliolate, four trifoliolate, beginning of flowering, and beginning of pod formation soybean growth stages, respectively. Producers in the most northern soybean region of the USA should combine early planting, optimum RM cultivars, 457,000 seed ha(-1) SR, and 31 cm RS to improve yield and profit compared to current management practices.

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