Inoculants by Crop - JumpStart - Soybean

Phosphate Drives Soybean Growth
Phosphate is essential for soybean growth. A 55-bushel per acre soybean crop takes up 53 pounds per acre of P2O5 per acre. And for every bushel of soybean harvested, 0.80 pounds of P2O5 per acre is removed from the field.

Research done in Indiana, over a 10 year period, showed that the average soybean yield increased from 44 bushels per acre to 54 bushels per acre - a yield increase of 18.5% when phosphate fertilizer was used3.

Phosphate is Crucial to Nitrogen Fixation
Research shows that phosphate nutrition has a significant positive impact on nitrogen fixation. Good phosphate nutrition results in more nodules being formed and more active nitrogen fixation.

  • Phosphorous is critical for photosynthesis, which is basically developed energy in the leaves. Plant energy is important because nitrogen fixation requires an enormous amount of energy. Thus, the more energy the plant has, the more nitrogen fixation the plant can support.
  • Phosphorous helps move the energy from photosynthesis to the roots, where it is needed to fuel nitrogen fixation.
  • More extensive root growth - provides greater opportunity for the development of nitrogen-fixing nodules.
  • Faster development of active nodules - results in greater nitrogen fixation.
  • More active nitrogen fixation means more nitrogen to the plant, which means higher yields.
  • Increases the number and size of nodules and the amount of nitrogen fixed by the plant.
  • Higher population of Bradyrhizobia bacteria in the soil surrounding the root.
  • Increases the percent and total nitrogen in the harvested portion of the crop.

Phosphate Fertility Challenges
Phosphate fertility programs in soybeans deal with several challenges that may limit phosphate availability and uptake:

  • Soybean seed is very sensitive to fertilizer salt injury, therefore all fertilizer must be placed away from the seed - broadcast before planting, deep banded, or banded in a 2 x 2 inch side band while seeding. However, placing the phosphate fertilizer away from the seed prevents optimum early season uptake.
  • Under no-till conditions, if broadcast phosphate is commonly used, the phosphate level in the rooting zone may be lower than the surface layers.
  • When soil surface residues are high and soil is cold and wet, conditions common under early seeding or reduced tillage programs, phosphate availability may be limited.

    3 Potash and Phosphate Institute; Yield and Economic Responses to Phosphorus; Better Crops/Vol. 83 (1999, No.1).

19 soybean trials prove the performance of JumpStart.

Summary Number
of Demos
Yield Differences
Net Return¹
$/acre
bu/ac
% of Control
Soybean 19
.52
102%
$3.36

¹Net returns were calculated using 5 year average (2000-2004) US commodity prices for crops and fertilizer less the 2006 suggested retail price for JumpStart.

JumpStart Application
JumpStart is sold as a wettable powder that is mixed into water and applied to the seed prior to seeding.

JumpStart Application Rates for Soybean

 
JumpStart 2.0 oz
JumpStart 10 oz
Amount of seed treated
50 units
2,500 lb
250 units
12,500 lb
Recommended water volume
3.9 US quarts
27 US quarts

See the Inoculant Application Methods section for more information on how to apply JumpStart.

MultiAction Fertility

JumpStart comes premixed with a rhizobia strain for nitrogen fixation in soybeans.  See the section on TagTeam soybean for more information.

For more information on the unique features of JumpStart click on JumpStart.

Philom Bios - the inoculant companyReturn Home
Next Generation TagTeam - Best Yields. Best Value.