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What Is Your Yield Monitor Really Telling You?

Harvest has begun, which means farmers are spending more time in their combines and have their eye on their yield monitors.

Every year, farmers will undoubtedly find parts of fields that yield less than others, and some might wonder what they can do to fix it.

The soy checkoff funds research to increase and protect soybean yields. One example is a project led by Shawn Conley, Ph.D., extension soybean specialist at the University of Wisconsin.

“I’ve been working on the USB High Yield Project, and have been asked many times why we’re conducting this type of high-yield research,” explains Conley. “First, we want to understand the yield potential out there for growers. Our point is trying to understand the factors that cause the biggest yield loss and strategies that will give farmers a positive return on investment to increase soybean yields.”

Common yield-limiting factors include:

  • Soil quality, such as texture, type, structure, nutrient availability and pH.
  • Excess moisture.
  • Stresses, such as diseases, insects and weeds.
  • Field history, including herbicide, pesticide and fertilizer applications.

Conley suggests the following three management strategies to ensure maximum soybean yields and urges farmers to see them as investments, not expenses.

  • Genetics. To ensure maximum yield potential, farmers should select the best genetics and traits. According to Conley’s data, farmers could see as much as a 20-bushel difference between the best- and worst-yielding varieties in a trial location. He encourages farmers to ignore early sales and wait for yield data from the previous year before making seed-selection decisions.
  • Pre-emergence herbicides. At minimum, these inputsmaintain yield and, in many cases, improve it. They also allow for greater flexibility of post-emergence herbicides and reduce early-season competition between weeds and the crop. “Looking across the United States, the prevalence of herbicide-resistant weeds is moving northward,” says Conley. “If you want to look for problems, go to those areas focused on glyphosate for the last 10 years, and you’ll see the kind of train wreck you want to avoid.
  • Fertility. Inadequate soil fertility is one of the main yield-limiting factors over the last two decades, Conley says. The levels of potassium and phosphorus in the soil have steadily dropped throughout the Midwest. As yields have improved, so have the amounts of these nutrients that those crops have removed. Maintaining fertility is important for optimizing yields on both a short-term and a long-term basis. Soil testing is the best guide to soil fertility. Conley urges farmers to take soil tests and use the results to build a customized nutrient-management plan that will improve yields throughout all fields.

Source : unitedsoybean.org


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Spring 2026 weather outlook for Wisconsin; What an early-arriving El Niño could mean

Video: Spring 2026 weather outlook for Wisconsin; What an early-arriving El Niño could mean

Northeast Wisconsin is a small corner of the world, but our weather is still affected by what happens across the globe.

That includes in the equatorial Pacific, where changes between El Niño and La Niña play a role in the weather here -- and boy, have there been some abrupt changes as of late.

El Niño and La Niña are the two phases of what is collectively known as the El Niño Southern Oscillation, or ENSO for short. These are the swings back and forth from unusually warm to unusually cold sea surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean along the equator.

Since this past September, we have been in a weak La Niña, which means water temperatures near the Eastern Pacific equator have been cooler than usual. That's where we're at right now.

Even last fall, the long-term outlook suggested a return to neutral conditions by spring and potentially El Niño conditions by summer.

But there are some signs this may be happening faster than usual, which could accelerate the onset of El Niño.

Over the last few weeks, unusually strong bursts of westerly winds farther west in the Pacific -- where sea surface temperatures are warmer than average -- have been observed. There is a chance that this could accelerate the warming of those eastern Pacific waters and potentially push us into El Niño sooner than usual.

If we do enter El Nino by spring -- which we'll define as the period of March, April and May -- there are some long-term correlations with our weather here in Northeast Wisconsin.

Looking at a map of anomalously warm weather, most of the upper Great Lakes doesn't show a strong correlation, but in general, the northern tiers of the United States do tend to lean to that direction.

The stronger correlation is with precipitation. El Niño conditions in spring have historically come with a higher risk of very dry weather over that time frame, so this will definitely be a transition we'll have to watch closely as we move out of winter.