Skip to main content
Journal of Nematology logoLink to Journal of Nematology
. 1990 Apr;22(2):220–223.

Coating Soybean Seed with Oxamyl for Control of Heterodera glycines

J L Townshend
PMCID: PMC2619026  PMID: 19287713

Abstract

Oxamyl coated on soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Elgin) seeds in solutions of 20, 40, 80, and 160 mg/ml had no serious deleterious effects on seedling emergence and growth when planted in sterile soil. Seedling emergence on day 3 was less than that of the uncoated control, but by day 7 emergence was equal to, or greater than, the control. Shoot and root growth from seed coated with oxamyl in 40 and 80 mg/ml solutions was greater than that of the control. In soil infested with soybean cyst nematode, Heterodera glycines, shoot weight of soybean plants from seeds coated with oxamyl in 80 mg/ml solution was 11 and 9% greater at weeks 3 and 7, respectively, than from uncoated seeds. Numbers of juveniles (J3 and J4) and adults of H. glycines observed on the roots of plants from oxamyl-coated seeds were 83, 42, and 49% less at weeks 3, 5, and 7, respectively, than numbers on the roots of the untreated control. Numbers of J2 extracted from the roots of plants from oxamyl-coated seeds were 75% less at weeks 5 and 7 than those extracted from roots of uncoated seeds. The numbers of J2 extracted from the soil planted to oxamyl-coated seeds were 51 and 33% less at weeks 5 and 7, respectively, than from soil planted to uncoated seed.

Keywords: Glycine max, Heterodera glycines, oxamyl, seed coating, soybean, soybean cyst nematode

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (338.4 KB).


Articles from Journal of Nematology are provided here courtesy of Society of Nematologists

RESOURCES