What can cause soybean pod loss and seed abortion?
Story Date: 9/18/2020

 

Source: NCSU COOPERATIVE EXTENSION, 9/16/20


We are getting reports of soybean pods that are both aborting and not filling out with seeds. Environment, stink bugs, and disease are all factors that can lead to these issues in soybean reproductive development. The soybean yield components are 1. plants/A, 2. pods/plant, 3. seeds/pod, and 4. seed size. Any stressors, whether environmental, insects, or diseases, during reproductive development can impact yield components 2-4.

The soybean plant will naturally abort some pods, but these are typically smaller pods. The soybean plant will not typically abort pods after R6 (full seed) and at this point and in R5 (beginning seed) the plant will typically respond to stress by limiting seed fill which can lead to flat pods. Any environmental condition that limits critical needs for the plant (photosynthate, water, nutrients) can cause pod abortion from early pod development to early seed development and then inhibited seed fill after that point. Pod abortion and inhibited seed fill will be more likely if multiple weather events have caused stress on the soybean plants (for example, in 2020 excessive moisture early followed by drought conditions followed by an extreme rainfall event after a hurricane). Diseases are another culprit that can cause stress on soybeans plants and impacts to yield components. Despite a below-average year for foliar diseases, we believe that compromised root systems due to excessive moisture and soil-borne diseases are causing plant stress. If diseases are limiting water or nutrient uptake, it can restrict photosynthate movement into the pods and seed. Aerial blight is a disease that has been observed in North Carolina this year that can cause pod loss. Nematodes could also be responsible for adding stress by restricting water and nutrient movement into the plant. Heavy stink bug pressure can also cause pod loss and flat seed; however, other injury characteristic of stink bugs should be present before concluding insect injury alone is the culprit. 

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