By
Rhonda Whitmire MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Soybean farmers have relied on variety testing
results for many years, and now they can view the latest
results on the Internet. Since
1982, the Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Experiment
Station, in cooperation with Mississippi State University
and the Mississippi Soybean Promotion Board, has tested
various soybean varieties. Farmers receive the results
through MAFES and extension publications and by word of
mouth. Dr. Alan
Blaine, extension soybean specialist at Mississippi State
University, said farmers with Internet access also can read
the test results at
http://www.mafes.msstate.edu/beans/. "Currently,
the results of the soybean tests are the only results up to
date on the web site," Blaine said. "The Soybean Promotion
Board has been the driving force behind getting the latest
results online." Jimmy
Summers, a farmer and chairman of the Mississippi Soybean
Promotion Board, said few farmers have online services, but
the Internet is a growing source of information. "We
still use books, word of mouth and meetings to get
information to farmers," Summers said. "But, some day it may
be a great source of information for farmers." Truett
Bufkin, executive secretary of the Mississippi Soybean
Promotion Board, said while the Internet is not the No. 1
source, farmers are beginning to turn to the Internet for
material. "In the
years to come, the Internet will be one of the greatest
tools to get information out to the farmers," Bufkin said.
"For now, extension publications and meetings are the best
methods." Since
the variety testing began in the early 1980s, soybean
farmers have used the results to determine which variety
would best be suited for their environment. Bernie
White, senior research assistant in plant and soil sciences
at MSU, said the tests are conducted at seven different
locations across the state. This is done to consider all
possible variables. "The
tests are spread out to cover different soil types,
environmental conditions and management practices," White
said. "It also allows researchers to test the varieties
under irrigated and non- irrigated conditions." Blaine
said testing the varieties in different conditions gives
farmers an opportunity to choose the variety that could work
best for them and their area. "The
multiple testing sites lets farmers look at a majority of
what is out there in a side-by-side comparison," Blaine
said. Much of
the research dollars required for the testing comes from the
growers themselves. Blaine said the growers pay a small
percentage on every bushel sold. "Half of
that money is used on the national level and the other
remains in Mississippi and is handled by the Mississippi
Soybean Promotion Board," Blaine said. "The board uses the
growers' money to sponsor research, and for promotion, and
new uses and products." Summers
said this money funds research that helps determine the
varieties farmers will plant. "We make
our living by these results," Summers said. "We take the
results, select the variety that preforms the best and bring
that variety to our farms. It saves us from a lot of hit and
misses." The
board is helping fund the variety testing program and
getting these results on the Internet so that farmers will
have easier access to the information. Released:
Jan. 26, 1998
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Soybean Variety
Test Results Go On The Web
Contact: Dr. Alan Blaine, (601) 325-4074
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:50
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an98/980126ab.htm
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