Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, February 27, 1982, Image 40

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    A4o—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 27,1982
PHA director of sale Michael
Weimer paid $11,500 for a bred
heifer consigned by Lester Poust,
Muncy. Sired by Plushanski
Persuader, the heifer is out of
Mun-Cre Elevation Lasso, Ex
cellent 94-2 E, who boasts a top
record of 30,302 pounds of milk and
1,208 pounds of fat as a 5-year-old.
The heifer is due in September to
Glendeil Arlinda Chief,
Alan McCauley and Alvin
Stoltztus of Elizabethtown con
signed an open yearling which sold
for $9,500. The Valiant daughter,
Dunwood-ND Cola-ET, is out of
Mar-Elv Dividend Coco, an Ex
'V *
The top selling heifer Mun-Cre Persuader
Lilly, was purchased by Michael Weimer, top
row center, for $11,500. Sired by Plushanski
Persuader and out of Mun-Cre Elevation
Lasso, Ex 94-2 E, the heifer is due to calve in
September to Glendeti Arlinda Chief. Ac
companying Weimer in the sale ring are:
bottom row from left to right; William,
ST. LOUIS, Mo. - “We want to
look under the hood,” said
University of Minnesota resear
cher William A. Brim. “You can’t
sit along the side of the road and
figure out what makes automobiles
tick. You have to look under the
hood.
Brun was explamg the basic
research approach he and
colleague Mark L. Brenner are
taking to study what Brun calls the
traffic patterns of a growth hor
mone called abscisic acid which is
found in soybean plants.
Brun of the University’s
Department of Agronomy and
Plant Genetics, and Brenner of the
Department. of Horticultural
Science and Landscape Ar
chitecture are collaborating on
one phase of a Minnesota
Agricultural Experiment Station
project which ultimately seeks to
determine when and to what
degree physiological yield
limitations are imposed on the
soybean plant by the hormones
that the plant produces.
The American Soybean
Association is contributing $9,570
to purchase supplies and equip
ment. Monsanto Agricultural
Products Co, will provide $39,156 to
cover personnel for the abscisic
acid research which will run two
years.
Holstein sale
{Continued from Page At)
cellent Performer daughter. The
Gold Medal Dam completed her
best record of 28,340 pounds of milk
and 1,030 pounds of tat.
Martinsburg breeder Barry
England paid $7,000 tor a tresh
heifer consigned by Steve Hoover
also ot Martinsburg. England’s
purchase, Silverwood GAC Lady is
sired by Glendeil and out ot a Very
Good Paclamar Master daughter.
Prior to the sale, the crowd was
treated to rousing chorus ot bar
bershop quartet featuring PHA
membership director Doug Her
shey, Chub Hostetler, Jett and
Paul Miller.
Researchers study soybean plant hormone
Abscisic acid, or ABA, a
naturally occurring plant- hor
mone, is considered to inhibit
growth in a plant. ABA causes
closure of the stomates, the very
small openings on the surface of
the leaf. The stomates need to be
open to carry on photosynthesis,
which is perhaps the most process
on earth.
Scientists refer to a leaf as a
source, a place where something
originates. A sink is where
something is utilized, in this case,
the carbohydrates or sugars
produced by photosynthesis
originate in the leaves and flow to
the sink, which is usually the
developing seed.
"We know from our previous
research that ABA travels from
the leaf, where it is produced, to
the seed,” Brun said, "We want to
know if ABA travels passively with
the sugars just going along for
the ride or if has its own inside
track.”
"if ABA accumulates in the leal,
in effect the factory shuts down,”
he added. "It you have filling pods
that relieve the leaves oi some ot
the ABA, the leaves can carry on
photosynthesis longer.
"So far we have not investigated
whether other actively growing
sinks such as developing leaves,
root tips, axillary buds, or nodules.
- PO! ,-r ii icates strong family that
will produce the unborn embryo that Dick
Clark, far right, purchased for American
Breeder Service. The $17,500 embryo was
consigned by John and Karen Gilliland, left of
poster. Gilliland’s consignment is sired by
IVI
executive secretary of PHA, Penrose Hallowell,
State agriculture secretary, Charlene Rohrer,
state dairy princess, Lester Poust, consignor.
Alan McCauley, Bob Kauffman and Doty
Remsburg, auctioneers and Elvin Hess,
leadsman. Back row, Charles Backus, Weimer
and Horace Backus.
which import large quantities of
carbohydrate, may also import
ABA.”
While ABA functions as an
inhibitor within the leaf, causing
stomatal closure, Brun said ABA
may have both inhibitory and
promotive effects in developing
seeds and other sink tissues.
FAIRFAX, Va. Most legumes
are very sensitive to soil acidity.
Alfalfa soils should be limed to a
pH of 6.5 or higher. Clovers and
birdsfoot trefoil are a little more
tolerant of soil acidity, but they
respond to a sound liming
program.
Soybeans are one crop that too
often has suffered by a neglect of
liming. Soybeans are very sen
sitive to low pH soils, and low or
mediocre yields often result from
an inadequate liming program.
Soybeans grown in rotation with
corn can be a particular problem.
The heavy amounts ot nitrogen
apphed for the corn crop are a
major cause of soil acidity. In tact,
tor each pound ot nitrogen applied,
about tour pounds ot limestone are
needed to neutralize the acidity
formed.
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41
Soybeans respond to
The convention sale had its lighter moments, such as this
crooning quartet which kicked off the bidding and buying.
From left to right the group includes Chub Hostetter, Doug
Hershey, Jeff Miller and Paul Miller.
"More knowledge about ABA
metabolism in soybean sink tissues
may provide important insights
into the regulation of soybean sink
activity,” he said.
The researchers also want to
find out what various en
vironmental stresses, such as
water stress or temperature
If corn is ground for two or three
years before planting soybeans, a
large amount of acidity is formed.
If lime is not applied, the f ollowmg
soybean crop will suffer from soil
acidity.
You should be particularly aware
of lime needs for soybeans at the
tune of planting corn the year
before going into soybeans. £ven
though the soil pH may be high
enough for corn, it may be too low
for soybeans. Lame applied at this
Sweet Haven Tradition and out of a Very Good
Bootmaker. The consignors and buyer are
joined by, from left to right: auctioneers Art
Kling, Charles and .Horace Backus and Doty
Remsburg, and William Nichol, PHA executive
secretary.
stress, and applications of
chemical growth regulators will do
to AfiA’s traffic patterns.
This work, Brun said, will
broaden understanding of the
hormonal traffic patterns in the
plant as a whole rather than just
between the leaves and the fruit.
liming
tune can have a big effect on
soybean yields.
As a last report, if the soil is acid
and it is tune to plant soybeans, try
drilling about 500 pounds per acre
of limestone with the beans,
recommends the National
Limestone Institute. This could
increase yields by several bushels
per acre. However, the best
practice is a sound liming program
well in advance of planting
soybeans. Q
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