Event Details
Date
March 11, 2020
Time
9am - 1pm
Location
Civil Defense Center
7220 State Route 54
Bath, NY 14810
Host
Cornell Cooperative Extension of Steuben County
Ariel Kirk
607-664-2300
email Ariel Kirk
2020 Steuben County Crop Symposium
March 11, 20202020 Steuben County Crop Symposium
Cornell Cooperative Extension of Steuben County
Civil Defense Center
7220 State Route 54
Bath, NY 14810
Wednesday, March 11, 2020
9:00 am - 1:00 pm
Please register by Monday, March 9th by phone 607-664-2300 or email Ariel Kirk at adk39@cornell.edu
Cost of workshop is $15.00 to cover lunch
Pesticide recertification credits (2.25) for categories 1a, 10, 21, and 23
9:00 - Registration
9:30-10:15 - Regulatory Updates Related to the Federal Worker Protection Standard
Christopher Wainwright, DEC Pesticide Control Specialist
Updates regarding the WPS created to protect employees in agribusiness fields, including farms, forests, nurseries, and greenhouses from work related exposure to agricultural pesticides.
10:15-11:00 - Dealing with the Double Whammy of Sudden Death Syndrome and Soybean Cyst Nematode Expansion in NY
Jamie Cummings, NYS Integrated Pest Management Field Crops and Livestock Coordinator
Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS) of soybean has expanded throughout many production regions across NYS since its discovery in 2012. Given the known correlation between SDS infection and presence of the Soybean Cyst Nematode (SCN), statewide efforts were made to survey for SCN in NYS. Since its first discovery in 2016 in one field in Cayuga County, a recent 2019 SCN survey confirmed this pest in seven more fields in six additional counties. The biology, epidemiology, association and management of SDS and SCN will be discussed.
11:00-11:45 - The Biology and Ecology of Palmer amaranth and Waterhemp: what you need to know, now, to avoid problems later
Dr. Lynn Sosnoskie, Weed Biologist, Cornell School of Integrative Plant Science
Dr. Lynn Sosnoskie is a newly hired Assistant Professor of Weed Ecology and Management in Specialty Crop at Cornell University. Although her research will focus, primarily, on NY's fruit and vegetable industry, she will also be involved in documenting the distribution of herbicide resistant weeds in the state as well as characterizing their resistance profiles. Dr. Sosnoskie has spent more than a decade studying the dioecious amaranth (Palmer amaranth and waterhemp), with a specific interest on understanding how biological characteristics (such as emergence patterns, growth rate, reproductive output) affect weed management success.
12:00-1:00 - Lunch