Healthy plants resist disease. Stressed, undernourished, biologically depleted plants don't. This guide covers the diseases that hit corn and soybean hardest — but more importantly, it covers how to build a system where they don't get a foothold in the first place. By the time symptoms show, fungicide is usually too late. The real work happens long before that.
Take any one corner away and disease can't develop. This single concept underlies almost every management decision — from variety selection to fungicide timing to residue handling.
The Disease Triangle is the foundational model of plant pathology. Disease only develops when three elements converge at the same time and place — a susceptible host, a virulent pathogen, and a favorable environment. Take any one corner away and disease cannot establish.
Click each element on the triangle, or use the buttons below, to explore how regenerative management influences each side.
Soil biology is the foundation of plant immunity. Mycorrhizal networks, beneficial bacteria, and balanced mineral nutrition delivered through a living soil web produce plants that are inherently more resistant — before a pathogen ever arrives.
A diverse, active soil microbiome is nature's most effective disease suppression system. Microbial competition, predation, and naturally produced antibiotics keep pathogen populations in check without resistance risk.
Healthy soil structure, high organic matter, and diverse cropping systems create conditions that are unfavorable for disease — addressing the environmental side of the triangle from the ground up.
What kills a fungus won't touch a virus. What works on bacteria misses nematodes entirely. Knowing what you're dealing with is half the battle.
By far the most common cause of crop disease. Spread by spores, survive in residue, thrive in moisture. Most labeled fungicides target these.
Less common in row crops but harder to control. Move in water, enter through wounds. Fungicides won't touch them — copper products give partial control at best.
Spread by insects, seed, or mechanical contact. No spray cures viral infection — control means controlling the vector, planting clean seed, and choosing resistant genetics.
Microscopic worms in the soil. Hit roots, not leaves — so symptoms show up as stunting, yellowing, and yield loss without obvious foliar disease. SCN is the costliest pathogen in U.S. soybean.
Tap any disease for full ID notes, conditions that favor it, and management priorities.
Diseases show themselves in patterns. Learning to read those patterns — leaf shape, lesion color, where it shows up first — will get you to the right diagnosis faster than memorizing every disease name.

Lesions tell you a lot. Shape (rectangular, round, irregular), color (tan, brown, black, with or without halo), and where they appear (lower canopy first vs scattered, between veins vs across them) all narrow the field fast.

Wilting that doesn't recover overnight isn't drought. It's usually a vascular pathogen, root rot, or bacterial blight. The pattern — single plants, rows, or whole patches — tells you whether it's seedborne, soilborne, or splashed.

Yellowing that follows the rows or shows up in patches isn't usually a fertility problem. Stunted plants with healthy-looking neighbors — that's a sign of root issues, nematode pressure, or virus. SCN is the classic example: by the time you can see it from the road, you've already lost yield.

Stalk rots take down standability, not yield directly — but a field that goes down before harvest costs you everything you can't pick up. Pinch test or push test in late season tells you what you're dealing with before the wind does.

Ear and pod diseases hit yield, but they also hit quality and grain marketability. Some — Gibberella, Fusarium, Aspergillus — produce mycotoxins that come with discounts or rejection at the elevator.

If you don't pull plants, you'll miss most root diseases. Yellowing, stunting, and uneven stands are often root problems. White cysts, dark lesions, rotted laterals, and reduced root mass all tell their own story — and most of them are invisible from the cab.
Weather sets the stage, but plant health decides the script. Most years, you have some pressure but not enough to matter. Then weather lines up wrong on a vulnerable crop, and a problem that's been building shows up everywhere at once. A well-fed plant in biologically active soil shrugs off conditions that wreck a stressed one.
Long leaf wetness periods plus warm temperatures (70–85°F) is what nearly every foliar fungal pathogen wants. Heavy dew, frequent showers, dense canopies, and overhead irrigation all extend that window.
Soil temperatures below 55°F slow seed germination, leaving seeds and seedlings exposed to seedling disease pathogens for longer. Pythium and Phytophthora love cold, wet ground — and seed treatments only do so much.
Stalk rots, charcoal rot, and several seed-quality issues blow up when crops get stressed late season. But it's not just the weather — it's whether the plant has the silica, calcium, and trace minerals it needs to defend itself. A nutritionally deficient plant has thinner cell walls, weaker immune signaling, and fewer secondary metabolites to suppress invaders.
A healthy plant in a healthy system rarely gets sick. Strong programs start with plant resilience and soil biology — and only escalate to chemistry when the first three layers truly need backup. The order matters.
The single biggest determinant of whether a plant gets sick is whether it has what it needs to defend itself. A well-fed plant produces tougher cell walls, stronger immune signaling, and more secondary metabolites that suppress pathogens before they establish.
A diverse, active soil microbiome is nature's disease suppression system. Beneficial bacteria, fungi, and protozoa compete with pathogens, produce antibiotic compounds, and prime the plant's own immune defenses through the rhizosphere.
Variety selection, rotation, residue handling, and planting decisions all shape whether the crop and the pathogen meet at the wrong time. These cultural levers hit two corners of the disease triangle without a single spray.
Fungicides are a tool, not a solution. They can rescue a high-pressure year on a vulnerable crop — but they don't cure disease, they only protect uninfected tissue. By the time symptoms show, fungicide is usually too late. And every pass disrupts the same soil biology that would have prevented the problem in the first place.
Used at the right time, fungicides can save a yield. Used as routine insurance, they cost more than they protect — and the costs aren't always on the invoice. Here's the honest picture.
Fungicides are protectants, not curatives. They protect uninfected tissue from new infection — they do very little for tissue that's already infected. By the time symptoms appear, the pathogen has been growing inside the plant for days or weeks.
This is why prevention through plant health and biology matters so much: the window where fungicide actually helps is narrow, and a stressed crop in a depleted system rarely hits it.
Most fungicides aren't selective. The same chemistries that suppress pathogenic fungi also suppress the beneficial fungi — including mycorrhizal networks and the biocontrol species (Trichoderma, Beauveria, and others) that would have been part of the plant's natural defense.
Repeated applications don't just kill the disease this year. They thin the soil biology that was keeping pressure manageable in future years.
Every fungicide pass selects for the survivors. Frogeye leaf spot's QoI (Group 11) resistance, widespread across U.S. soybean, is the textbook example — and it didn't take many years of overuse to get there.
Resistance isn't theoretical. It's already shrinking the toolbox. Every time you can skip a pass because the crop is healthy enough not to need it, you're protecting the chemistry for the years you actually do.
Some fungicides — strobilurins especially — produce a "stay-green" effect that growers like. But that effect comes with hormonal shifts in the plant: altered ethylene production, suppressed natural senescence, and in stressed seasons, occasional yield losses when the plant can't translocate properly into grain.
The compound on the leaf isn't free of consequence. It's a chemical that interacts with plant physiology — sometimes for the better, sometimes not.
The bottom line: A healthy plant in biologically active soil rarely needs a fungicide. A stressed plant in depleted soil often won't be saved by one anyway. The smart move is to make plant health and soil biology so strong that the fungicide question gets easier — used when it's truly justified, skipped when it isn't, and never relied on as the whole plan.
A good disease program is a sequence, not a single decision. Here's what you're watching, doing, and deciding through a typical season in corn and soybean.
Last year's disease notes, residue load, drainage problems, SCN test results.
Soil tests, residue load, problem-field maps, harvest data trends.
Half of "disease" calls in the field turn out to be something else. Here are the lookalikes that catch people most often.
Tar spot lesions are raised, tar-like, and embedded in the leaf — they don't rub off. Insect frass is loose and wipes away with a finger. If it scrapes off, it's not tar spot.
SCN and iron deficiency chlorosis both produce yellow, stunted patches. The difference is below ground. Pull plants, wash roots, and look for pinhead-sized white-yellow cysts on the root system.
Both diseases can produce interveinal chlorosis late season. Cut the stem in half lengthwise. SDS shows white, healthy pith with discolored outer tissue. Brown stem rot shows brown discoloration through the pith itself.
Many herbicide injuries — drift, carryover, ALS damage — produce strapping, cupping, or yellowing that looks like disease. The pattern usually gives it away. Disease shows in patterns tied to environment or seedling vigor; herbicide damage shows in spray-pass or drift patterns.
See if you can identify diseases from photos alone. Start with classic textbook symptoms, then move into ambiguous mid-stage lesions and lookalikes — the calls that actually matter in the field.
Each level shows you disease photos and asks you to pick the right diagnosis from four options.
AgriBio Systems · Jacksonville, IL · agribiosystems.com
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