
Severe symptoms reduced the ability of the susceptible variety to canopy, resulting in increased weed pressure in these plots.

As expected, the variety with no SCN resistance (marked as "S") exhibited extreme stress and accelerated maturity. Check out an entire greenhouse tomato harvest in under two minutes timelapse.

Video: Greenhouse Tomato Time-lapse - Vineland Research & Innovation Centre. Also, this video dramatically shows that even though varieties may have the same source of resistance, the expression of resistance varies. Greenhouse Tomato Time-lapse - Vineland Research & Innovation Centre. Time lapse can help identify just how much food a herd needs to last throughout the night. Varieties with a Peking source of resistance to SCN showed little to no symptoms of SCN. By setting up a Brinno camera in the barn Feijen Diervoeders have discovered that in some cases food can run out by as early as 2:00pm, meaning that the animals are left hungry until the next morning. Although SDS symptoms were scarce in 2013, the sequence of pictures (i.e., video) demonstrates the lack of SCN resistance in PI88788 varieties. This research indicates that drastic yield losses from SCN and SDS can occur in soybean fields with a history of SDS, and where SCN is capable of breaking down PI88788 resistance.īeginning on August 1, we mounted a time-lapse camera in this field to monitor the symptoms of soybean varieties with various resistances to SCN and SDS. Much of this research has been carried out in a grower's field in White County, Indiana where SCN populations are capable of overcoming PI88788 resistance and there is a history of SDS. Time-lapse of one of our creeks on the Farm. We have documented the ability of SCN to overcome the most common source of SCN resistance, PI88788, in Indiana. Time-lapse of one of the many live creeks and bubbling springs at Healing Moon Farm & Ranch. Collaborative research has been under way in Indiana since 2010, to devise programs to manage these two pests simultaneously.

Soybean cyst nematode (SCN) and sudden death syndrome (SDS) consistently cause soybean yield losses through out the North Central Region.
