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  1. Wet Weather and Weed Management

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-18/wet-weather-and-weed-management

    1.  Wet weather has delayed POST herbicide applications in both corn and soybeans.  This can result in weeds and crops that are larger and more advanced in growth stage than anticipated.  The larger crop is primarily a problem in corn, where a more advanc ...

  2. Saving Soybean Seed for Next Year

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-18/saving-soybean-seed-next-year

    Due to wet weather, a few farmers in northwest Ohio have not yet planted soybean.  Can this soybean seed be saved and planted next year?  1.)   Check with your seed dealer.   Your seed dealer may have options available to return seed.  Check with your see ...

  3. Wet Weather: Flooding, Poor Nodulation, and Disease Concerns

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-17/wet-weather-flooding-poor-nodulation-and-disease-concerns

    The forecast for the coming week is for continued rain and in many cases this will fall on already saturated soils across the northern and west central part of the state.  This is going to be tough on soybeans.  Here is a guide to help differentiate among ...

  4. Honors requirements for students transferring into SENR

    https://senr.osu.edu/honors-requirements-students-transferring-senr

    Students that transfer into SENR with honors standing as an incoming freshman or from another department on campus are eligible to continue their honors standing here in SENR.   Students are given one semester to determine if they will apply to the SENR H ...

  5. Still Working on Planting Soybean?

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-16/still-working-planting-soybean

    The majority of the soybean acres in Ohio have been planted.  (According to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service, 85% of the soybean acres were planted by May 31.)  However, even if 5% of the soybean acres are not yet planted, with 5.1 millio ...

  6. 2015-10

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-10

    ...

  7. Hitzhusen Interviewed for article on upcoming encyclical from Pope Francis

    https://senr.osu.edu/news/hitzhusen-interviewed-article-upcoming-encyclical-pope-francis

    Gregory Hitzhusen, a lecturer in the School of Environment and Natural Resources, who specializes in religious influences on environmental attitudes and behavior and who organized a special session at this past summer's Ecological Society of America ...

  8. Black Cutworms and Armyworms Still a Concern

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-10/black-cutworms-and-armyworms-still-concern

    Reports of black cutworm and armyworms catches are still coming in from surrounding states. The big concern over the next few weeks will be egg hatch and larval growth. Both hatch and growth is difficult to predict and is largely based on temperature and ...

  9. Corn Planting Nearing Completion – Time to Troubleshoot Emergence Problems

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-14/corn-planting-nearing-completion-%E2%80%93-time-troubleshoot-emergence

    According to the USDA/NASS (http://www.nass.usda.gov/) for the week ending May 24, corn was 87 percent planted, which was 21 percent ahead of last year and 17 percent ahead of the five-year average. Across the state, corn is at a range of growth stages. S ...

  10. Purple and Yellow Corn, What is Going On?

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2015-14/purple-and-yellow-corn-what-going

    Corn seedlings often turn yellow (due to low nitrogen uptake and/or limited chlorophyll synthesis) or purple (reduced root development) under cool, wet conditions. Some hybrids are more likely to increase anthocyanin (purple pigment) content when plants a ...

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