September 30, 2025

Southern Illinois farmers needed for ISA double-crop research

Join the Illinois Soybean Association’s On-Farm Trial Network and help identify the most profitable planting populations for double-crop soybeans in Illinois.

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. — Assume that 60% to 80% of the Illinois wheat acres are double-cropped with soybeans. That equates to about 500,000 to 700,000 acres of double-crop soybeans grown each year.

It is no surprise that many Illinois farmers told the Illinois Soybean Association in its annual Soybean Production Concerns survey that they want more agronomic research to maximize wheat and double-crop soybean production.

The next step was to work with members of the Illinois Wheat Association board to prioritize agronomic research through practical on-farm trials that deliver reliable, actionable results to improve double-crop soybean production in Illinois.

The goal of the ISA On-Farm trial Network is to bridge the gap between small-scale university trials, which often lack farmer engagement or broad applicability, and industry trials, which may be biased toward product promotion.

In 2026, program organizers are asking at least five farmers in southern Illinois to participate in the ISA OFTN double-crop soybean action trial.

The goal is to determine optimum planting populations for wheat and double-crop soybeans based on seed cost and yield.

After consulting with several southern Illinois crop consultants, the following protocol was developed:

• The farmer is responsible for planting and all management applications in the trial.

• Plot layout may vary depending on equipment and field dimensions, but each trial must cover at least 40 acres.

• Farmers must provide planter information and be able to adjust planting populations or use a variable seeding rate if available.

• The same soybean variety will be planted at three different populations — 180,000; 220,000; and 260,000 seeds per acre — for double-crop soybeans after wheat.

• Each trial will include at least four replications of each population treatment under the same management, for a total of 12 plots, each with a minimum width of 60 feet.

• The combine must have a calibrated yield monitor to ensure accurate post-harvest yield data.

Those interested in participating in this on-farm research to analyze the economically optimum planting population for double-crop soybeans on their farm, can fill out the ISA OFTN interest form at https://tinyurl.com/OFTN-Interest-Form.

If you have questions about participating in this study, contact Deanna Burkhart, ISA producer and field services administrator, at 309-307-9366 or deanna.burkhart@ilsoy.org.

Qualified farmers participating in ISA’s OFTN may be eligible for stipend payments. Program eligibility and payment amounts will vary based on specific guidelines.

OFTN is funded by the Illinois soybean checkoff program.

AgriNews Staff

AgriNews Staff

The Illinois AgriNews and Indiana AgriNews staff is in the field each week, covering topics that affect local farm families and their businesses. We give readers information they can’t get elsewhere to help them make better farming decisions.