"It's bizarre," said Greg Tylka, a plant
pathologist with Iowa State University Extension. "I can't
understand the motivation or a mechanism of how it would be
done."
Asian soybean rust is a fungus that can
sweep through fields, infecting plants and drastically cutting
yields.
The discovery of soybean rust in Iowa,
which usually leads the nation in soybean production, would be
terrible news for farmers and would force them to buy costly
chemicals to ward off the fungus.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Office
of the Inspector General declined to name the person who
submitted the sample. It reportedly came from Mahaska County in
March.
Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey
said the sample was submitted to Iowa State's Plant Disease
Clinic and the USDA confirmed it tested positive for Asian
soybean rust.
Officials with the state agency traveled to
Mahaska County and examined the bin and the fields the leaf
reportedly came from, as well as surrounding fields. They found
no evidence of rust.
"If it was represented to come from a field
that it did not come from, then it's doubtful that it was a
mistake," Northey said.
How the leaf got into Iowa still needs to
be determined. If someone was trying to blame soybean rust for
low yields in hopes of getting government compensation, the
attempt was misguided, Northey said. The government does not
reimburse farmers for damage by the fungus.
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Soybean plants in the same field the sample reportedly came from
were suffering from another common soybean leaf disease called
frogeye leaf spot, officials said.
Tylka said he doubted that a leaf infected with Asian soybean rust
could have blown hundreds of miles into Iowa from the southern
United States, where farmers have fought the fungus for years.
He said it was also unlikely it could have been caught in a seed bag
or truck, then transported to Iowa and singled out for a sample. The
timing was also suspect, he said, because no one would expect to
find soybean rust in a bin in March.
"When you add up the odds of all these things
happening, it just becomes too hard to believe," he said.
Wright said officials were told the leaf, which
was mostly intact, came from a bin that would have held materials
that had been thrust around in a combine. "When we saw the condition
of the leaf, it immediately put up some red flags," he said.
Soybean farmers in Iowa apparently had their
own suspicions and kept cool about the discovery, and Wright knew of
no one rushing out to purchase fungicides to apply to their fields.
He cautioned, however, that Asian soybean rust
is a real threat to the state, and he hopes the recent incident does
not make farmers complacent.
"All it would take is the right field, the
right environmental conditions, and we could have an epidemic," he
said. "The message to farmers is that this incident is unfortunate,
but that they should remain vigilant."
[Text copied
from file received from AP
Digital; By Amy Lorentzen, Associated Press writer]
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