Ohio Soybean Performance Trials 2021

Allen Geyer, Matthew Hankinson, John McCormick, and Laura Lindsey
Dept. of Horticulture & Crop Science
Ohio State University Extension and OARDC
The Ohio State University, College of Food, Agriculture and Environmental Science

INTRODUCTION

The purpose of the Ohio Soybean Performance Trials is to evaluate soybean varieties for yield and other agronomic characteristics. This evaluation gives soybean producers comparative information for selecting the best varieties for their unique production systems.

FIELD PLOT DESIGN

The entries for each test site were planted in a randomized complete block design. Each entry was replicated four times and planted in plots 28 ft long and 5 ft wide containing four rows seeded at 15-inch row width. Seeding rate was 150,000 seeds per acre. Corn was the previous crop at all locations. All locations were no-till except the N2 and S2 locations, which were planted into a stale seedbed. Farmer cooperators sprayed pre-emergence herbicides (varied by location). All locations were sprayed post-emergence with First Rate, Flexstar, and Select Max.

METHOD OF CONDUCTING TRIALS

Entries in Trials. Performance of entries in The Ohio Soybean Performance Trials are published if seed will be available to Ohio soybean producers for the following planting season. All 2021 entries were submitted voluntarily by seed companies. Entry fee charges were paid per entry and region.

Test by Maturity and Type. Varieties were grouped, tested and analyzed by maturity (early and late). Conventional (CV), Xtend (X), Enlist (EN), XtendFlex (XF), sulfonylurea-tolerant soybean (STS), Liberty Link/glyphosate tolerant (LLGT27), EN/STS, and XF/STS varieties were tested in the same block to allow for head-to-head comparisons. Varieties are comparable within a location and maturity grouping (early or late). Conventional herbicides were sprayed on all entries. Use the table below to find varieties by region and maturity.

PRODUCTION PRACTICES

Table 1: The 2021 Ohio Soybean Performance Trials, Site Descriptions
Sites N1 N2 C1 C2 S1 S2
County Henry Sandusky Mercer Union Preble Clinton
Soil texture Clay Sandy clay Loam Clay loam Clay loam Clay Silty clay loam
Soil pH 6.5 5.8 7.5 5.4 6.8 6.1
Soil Test P-Mehlich (ppm) 41 33 90 25 53 66
Soil Test K (ppm) 153 76 162 75 129 159
Plant date May 19 May 17 May 21 May 25 May 15 May 14
Harvest date Nov 9 Oct 20 Nov 8 Oct 19 Oct 13 Nov 4

Map of Soybean Trials in Ohio

 

MEASUREMENTS AND RECORDS

Relative maturity. Relative maturity is a rating designed to account for all of the factors that affect maturity date and includes variety, planting date, weather, latitude, and disease. Maturity is defined as the "95% brown pods" stage. A variety with a Relative Maturity rating of 3.5 will reach the 95% brown pod stage 5 days later than a variety with a rating of 3.0. Relative maturity was submitted by seed companies.

Lodging Score. There was no lodging in 2021.

Seed size. Seed size is reported as number of seeds per pound. Seed size was determined from varieties grown at the C2 location.

Yield. Each soybean variety was harvested when the moisture content was between 8 and 14 percent and yields reported in bushels per acre at 13 percent moisture.

Protein, Oil Percentage. Analysis was determined by near infrared transmittance technology. The test was performed using a Foss NIR whole grain analyzer and is reported at 13 percent moisture. Protein and oil were determined from varieties grown at the C2 location.

LSD. A Least Significant Difference (LSD) for yield was computed for each location and maturity grouping. LSDs are reported in bushels per acre at 13 percent moisture. Yields of two varieties within a location and maturity grouping are significantly different 90% of the time if their yields differ by more than the LSD value shown for that maturity group. A double asterisk (**) is used to denote the variety with the highest yield within a location and maturity grouping. A single asterisk (*) is used to denote varieties with yield not statistically different than the highest yielding variety.

DATA USE. Inclusion of entries in the Ohio Soybean Performance Trials does not constitute an endorsement of a particular entry by the Ohio State University, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, or Ohio State University Extension.

Go to Ohio Crop Performance

12/2021
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Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Roger Rennekamp, Director, Ohio State University Extension.