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Delayed (Again) Soybean Planting in Minnesota
blog-crop-news.extension.umn.edu
May 22, · Our best dataset on soybean yield response to delayed planting comes from Lamberton, where Bruce Potter and Steve Quiring have been conducting date-of-planting trials since Much of the variation in yield response comes from conditions after planting - as noted above - but on average, yields tend to decline very little after mid-May ...
Delayed Soybean Planting? Big Deal -- or No?
blog-crop-news.extension.umn.edu
According to a long-term planting date study by Bruce Potter and Steve Quiring at the Southwest Research and Outreach Center in Lamberton, yield losses through May are relatively small. Soybeans planted before June 1 should produce about 90% of those planted by the first week of May, on average.
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