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The Problem
Jump to the SolutionFrogeye leaf spot is caused by the fungus Cercospora sojina. It can survive between seasons on infected soybean residue and may also be seed-borne, allowing it to move into new fields via infected seed or volunteer soybeans. The disease can manifest in three key ways:
Frogeye leaf spot symptoms usually appear first on young, upper canopy leaves
As disease severity increases, lesions may enlarge and merge, causing yellowing and premature leaf drop
In humid conditions, gray, fuzzy fungal growth may be visible on the underside of lesions. Severe infections can lead to upper canopy blighting and defoliation.
Frogeye leaf spot was historically concentrated in the Southern U.S. However, over the past decade, it has expanded into over 18 soybean-producing states across the U.S. and has also started developing resistance to strobilurin fungicides. With potential yield losses of 60%, it is important to use multiple modes of action in fungicide applications to protect against future resistance development.
Since frogeye leaf spot prefers warm, humid weather and can persist in crop residue, it is most commonly reported across the southern Soybean Belt like Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee, though it can move North into Illinois, Indiana and Iowa if conditions are right.
The Solution
From disease to crop stress, you don't know what the season will bring so your yield potential needs protection on all fronts! That's why only Cleaner & Greener fungicides are powered by exclusive ADEPIDYN® and SOLATENOL® technologies to provide a step change in broad-spectrum disease control and protection from crop stress like drought.