Soybean Disease Loss Estimates From the United States and Ontario, Canada — 2019
Published: 12/31/2019
DOI: doi.org/10.31274/cpn-20210607-1
CPN-1018-19
Each year, soybean diseases reduce yield in the United States and Ontario, Canada. The importance of these diseases varies annually, and many factors influence which diseases significantly affect yield. These factors can include environment, production practices, and a variety’s susceptibility to disease.
The current publication provides the estimated annual soybean yield losses due to plant diseases and pathogens in 2019 for the major soybean-producing areas in the United States and Ontario, Canada. Extension, university, USDA plant pathologists and soybean specialists from each state and province provided the estimates. These reports accounted for 99.9 percent of the total soybean production in the United States and Ontario in 2019. The estimated losses include those caused by foliar diseases, stem diseases, nematodes, seedling blights, and diseases of harvested grain.
Disease loss estimates are gathered through various means including disease surveys; interactions with Extension, university, government, industry, and farmer representatives; and personal experience with disease losses. Estimation methods vary by state or province.
For this publication, the authors determined disease loss values based on yield before estimated losses for each state or province using this formula:
(harvested bushels/[{100 – percent estimated disease loss}/100])
The authors then formulated the total number of bushels lost for each disease ([percent loss/100] x yield before estimated loss) for each state or province.
Additional information on yield and economic losses due to soybean diseases can be found at the CPN Field Crop Disease Loss Calculator.
2019 Production
The United States produced nearly 3.6 billion bushels of soybean in 2019, the lowest reported value since 2013. Ontario, Canada, produced 136.3 million bushels.
Figure 1. 2020 soybean production (in millions of bushels) from 29 U.S. states and Ontario, Canada.
Figure 2. Sclerotinia stem rot (white mold) was estimated to have caused more than 31 million bushels of yield losses in 2019 in the United States and Ontario.
Craig Grau
2019 Disease Losses
In all, 6.1 percent of the potential estimated soybean production (bushels/acre) in 2019 was lost due to disease in the top 29 soybean-producing states, and 10.4 percent of the total estimated soybean production in 2019 was lost due to disease in Ontario, Canada. Table 1 provides yield loss estimates for the specific diseases included in the survey of plant pathologists throughout the soybean production system in the U.S. and Ontario, Canada. Estimated percent losses in 2019 were less than those reported in 2018.
Table 1. Estimated soybean yield losses from diseases in 29 soybean producing states in the United States and Ontario, Canada in 2019, listed in order of most losses to least losses in each disease category.
Disease | Total US losses (thousands of bushels) | Total Ontario losses (thousands of bushels) |
Root Rots and Seedling Blights | ||
Soybean cyst nematode | 77,392 | 5,319 |
Seedling diseases due to Fusarium, Pythium, Phomopsis, and Rhizoctonia | 25,578 | 2,660 |
Root-knot nematode | 8,681 | 0 |
Other nematodes¹ | 3,692 | 76 |
Taproot decline | 1,383 | 0 |
Reniform nematode | 1,023 | 0 |
Leaf and Aboveground Diseases | ||
Frogeye leaf spot | 12,399 | 15 |
Cercospora leaf blight | 7,529 | 76 |
Septoria brown spot | 5,731 | 76 |
Purple seed stain² | 1,470 | 76 |
Bacterial diseases | 810 | 15 |
Rhizoctonia aerial blight | 516 | 0 |
Virus diseases³ | 500 | 2 |
Target spot | 442 | 0 |
Soybean rust | 56 | 0 |
Downy mildew | 54 | 0 |
Stem Diseases | ||
Sclerotinia stem rot (White mold) | 29,556 | 1,520 |
Sudden death syndrome | 17,622 | 3,040 |
Phytophthora root and stem rot | 11,203 | 1,520 |
Pod and stem blight | 7,149 | 304 |
Brown stem rot | 4,357 | 76 |
Stem canker | 3,472 | 152 |
Fusarium wilt and root rot | 3,397 | 30 |
Charcoal rot | 3,210 | 0 |
Diaporthe (Phomopsis) seed decay4 | 2,516 | 760 |
Southern blight | 1,352 | 0 |
Anthracnose | 1,165 | 15 |
Other Diseases | ||
Other diseases5 | 12 | 0 |
¹Lance, root lesion, sting, stunt, and stubby root. Only root lesion nematode was reported in Ontario, Canada; ²A portion of the estimated yield loss value for purple seed stain in the U.S. is due to dockage from low quality seed reported from New York; ³Bean pod mottle, soybean mosaic, soybean vein necrosis, tobacco ringspot, and tobacco streak. Only soybean mosaic was reported in Ontario, Canada; 4A portion of the estimated yield loss value for Diaporthe (Phomopsis) seed decay in the U.S. is due to dockage from low quality seed reported from New York. Estimated yield loss values for Diaporthe (Phomopsis) seed decay from Ontario is due to dockage from low quality seed; 5Phymatotrichopsis root rot and red crown rot
Diseases in the Northern United States
The northern states in the U.S., which included Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, and Wisconsin, accounted for 77.7 percent of the total estimated yield losses in 2019. Since more than three-quarters of U.S. soybeans are produced in the northern states, disease losses in these states greatly affect the overall importance of different diseases across the country (see Table 2).
Table 2. Estimated soybean yield losses due to the seven most significant diseases in the northernmost U.S. states¹ in 2019.
Rank | Disease/Pathogen | Total losses (thousands of bushels) | |
Northern Region | Nation | ||
1 | 1 | Soybean cyst nematode | 64,245 |
2 | 2 | Sclerotinia stem rot (White mold) | 29,546 |
3 | 3 | Seedling diseases due to Fusarium, Pythium, Phomopsis, and Rhizoctonia | 21,957 |
4 | 4 | Sudden death syndrome | 16,099 |
5 | 6 | Phytophthora root and stem rot | 10,313 |
6 | 5 | Frogeye leaf spot | 9,610 |
7 | 9 | Pod and stem blight | 6,273 |
¹Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, and Wisconsin
Diseases in the Southern United States
Soybean cyst nematode, root-knot nematode, and Cercospora leaf blight were the three diseases of greatest importance in 2019 in the southernmost U.S., which included Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.
Table 3. Estimated soybean yield losses due to the seven most significant diseases in the southernmost U.S. states¹ in 2019.
Rank | Disease/Pathogen | Total losses (thousands of bushels) | |
Southern Region | Nation | ||
1 | 1 | Soybean cyst nematode | 13,147 |
2 | 7 | Root-knot Nematode | 8,652 |
3 | 8 | Cercospora leaf blight | 6,616 |
4 | 3 | Seedling diseases due to Fusarium, Pythium, Phomopsis, and Rhizoctonia | 3,621 |
5 | 5 | Frogeye leaf spot | 2,789 |
6 | 10 | Septoria brown spot | 2,206 |
7 | 4 | Sudden death syndrome | 1,523 |
¹Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia
Figure 3. Root-knot nematode caused more than 8.6 million bushels of yield losses in the southern U.S. in 2019.
Ed Sikora
Diseases in Ontario, Canada
Soybean cyst nematode caused the greatest estimated yield loss in Ontario, Canada, in 2019, followed by sudden death syndrome and seedling diseases (see Table 4). There were no foliar diseases present among the top yield-reducing diseases in Ontario.
Table 4. Estimated soybean yield losses due to the seven most significant diseases in Ontario, Canada in 2019.
Rank | Disease/Pathogen | Total losses (thousands of bushels) | |
Ontario, Canada | United States | ||
1 | 1 | Soybean cyst nematode | 5,319 |
2 | 4 | Sudden death syndrome | 3,040 |
3 | 3 | Seedling diseases due to Fusarium, Pythium, Phomopsis, and Rhizoctonia | 2,660 |
4a | 6 | Phytophthora root and stem rot | 1,520 |
4b | 2 | Sclerotinia stem rot (White mold) | 1,520 |
6 | 16 | Diaporthe (Phomopsis) seed decay | 760 |
7 | 9 | Pod and stem blight | 304 |
Disclaimer
The yield losses estimated in this publication were provided by members of the North Central Research and Extension Activity (NCERA) 137 Soybean Disease Committee and the Southern Soybean Disease Workers. The information contained in the current publication is meant to be used as a guide. The values in this publication are estimates and are not intended to be used as exact measurements of soybean yield losses due to plant diseases. However, these data provide valuable insight into the ranking of importance of a given disease within a production region (north or south) as well as across the entire production system. The most appropriate means available were used to estimate disease losses and no liability resulting from the use of these estimates is assumed.
Additional information on yield and economic losses due to soybean diseases can be found at the CPN Field Crop Disease Loss Calculator.
Acknowledgments
Authors
Carl Bradley, University of Kentucky; Tom Allen, Mississippi State University; Albert Tenuta, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Kelsey Mehl, University of Kentucky; and Adam Sisson, Iowa State University
Contributors
Ed Sikora, Auburn University; Terry Spurlock and Travis Faske, University of Arkansas; Alyssa Koehler, University of Delaware; Nick Dufault, University of Florida; Bob Kemerait, University of Georgia; Nathan Kleczewski, University of Illinois; Darcy Telenko, Purdue University; Daren Mueller, Iowa State University; Doug Jardine, Kansas State University; Carl Bradley, University of Kentucky; Trey Price and Boyd Padgett, Louisiana State University; Marty Chilvers and Fred Warner, Michigan State University; Dean Malvick and James Kurle, University of Minnesota; Tom Allen, Mississippi State University; Kaitlyn Bissonnette, University of Missouri; Loren Giesler, University of Nebraska; Gary Bergstrom, Cornell University; Lindsey Thiessen, North Carolina State University; Samuel Markell and Berlin Nelson, North Dakota State University; Anne Dorrance, The Ohio State University; John Damicone, Oklahoma State University; Albert Tenuta, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs; Alyssa Collins, Pennsylvania State University; John Mueller, Clemson University; Emmanuel Byamukama and Connie Tande, South Dakota State University; Heather Kelly, University of Tennessee; Tom Isakeit, Texas A&M University; Hillary Mehl, Virginia Tech; and Damon Smith, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Sponsors
The authors thank the United Soybean Board and the Grain Farmers of Ontario for their support. Support also was provided by State and Federal Funds appropriated to the State Land Grant Institutions of cooperating authors and the United States Department of Agriculture - National Institute of Food and Agriculture (USDA-NIFA).
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