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Tiny bug can mean big yield losses for Iowa soybean growers

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A very small insect is causing big trouble in Iowa’s soybean fields and it’s spreading quickly across the continent. The soybean cyst nematode, or S-C-N, is being tracked in a survey throughout the United States and Canada every few years. S-C-N Coalition co-leader and Iowa State University Extension plant pathologist Greg Tylka says the destructive bug has traveled far since 2017. “There are 55 new counties with SCN in 11 different states in the U.S.,” Tylka says, “and then also they found SCN in a bunch of new counties in Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba.”

As odd as it may sound, he says the most common way they believe the tiny bugs are being transported from field to field and from farm to farm is by the wind, specifically in blowing dirt. “The SCN female, which fills up with a couple hundred eggs and eventually dies — a dead female full of eggs is called a cyst — that cyst is about the size of a period at the end of a printed sentence in a book or in the newspaper,” Tylka says. “It’s tiny and it very easily can be in soil particles that are blown.” The soybean cyst nematode causes a lot of costly damage.

“Even a moderately low level of SCN is probably going to take two-to-five bushels per acre out of the yield,” Tylka says. “We have scenarios in Iowa where we’ve documented 22-to-25 bushels per acre yield loss. There is a lot of money being left in the field due to the SCN.”

Tylka says another reason there’s been more detection of S-C-N is that his coalition is encouraging producers to do more sample testing. He says one way to get a handle on the insect is by properly rotating crops.

Large Iowa National Guard unit starts returning home from Middle East tomorrow

News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Nearly 630 Iowa soldiers who have been deployed to the Middle East for the past 10 months are returning home. The soldiers returning to Iowa include a group of about 110 men and women from Davenport, 130 from both Cedar Rapids and Dubuque, and 250 from Waterloo. The Iowa Army National Guard is hosting modified community welcome home ceremonies for the soldiers, who are from the 1st Battalion “Ironman” 133rd Infantry Regiment. Due to health concerns associated with the pandemic, the ceremonies will not be open to the public, but they will be live-streamed for the public to view.

The first welcome home event will be held in Waterloo tomorrow (Wednesday) at noon. Others will take place in Cedar Rapids, Davenport and Dubuque before a second ceremony is held in Waterloo on April 13th.

The Ironman Battalion supported Operation Spartan Shield in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility. According to the Iowa Army National Guard, this was the fifth federal mobilization for the Ironman Battalion since 2000, including a nearly 22-month deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom from Sept. 2005 through Aug. 2007.

(Podcast) KJAN News at 8:05-a.m., 4/6/21

News, Podcasts

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

With News Director Ric Hanson.

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Heartbeat Today 4-6-2021

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

April 6th, 2021 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Bob Harris, Coach/President of the Southwest Iowa Fishing Team, after their first event at Prairie Rose Lake on Saturday.

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(Podcast) KJAN morning Sports report, 4/6/21

Podcasts, Sports

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

With Jim Field.

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Creston man arrested on a warrant

News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports a local man was arrested Monday night on a Union County warrant. 30-year-old Alex Cunningham, of Creston, was taken into custody at around 9:45-p.m., on a warrant for Failure to Serve Court Ordered Jail Sentence, on the original charge of Violation of Protection Order. Cunningham was being held in the Union County Jail until the balance of his sentence is served.

Northern Iowa ATV accident claims a life

News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

An accident involving an ATV in northern Iowa’s Winnebago County, Monday night, claimed one life and resulted in injuries to another person. The Iowa State Patrol says a 2021 Can-Am ATV wad traveling through a field west of Forest City at around 10:10-p.m., when the vehicle went off of a terrace and began to roll. An occupant in the vehicle was ejected and died at the scene. He was identified as 49-year-old John Eugene West, of Forest City. The second occupant, 23-year-old Terence Jacob West, also of Forest City, suffered non-life threatening injuries. He was flown by LifeNet helicopter to Mercy Hospital in Mason City.  Neither man was wearing a seat belt.

The Patrol said it wasn’t immediately clear who was driving the ATV. The accident remains under investigation.

DNR investigating northwest Iowa manure spill

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – State officials say liquid manure from a cattle operation near Remsen turned the water in a nearby creek brown and killed fish for several miles downstream. Department of Natural Resources staff were on site Monday, monitoring clean-up and conducting a count of dead fish. According to a news release from the agency, Louis Pick, who owns LCNJ Farms, filled a tanker with manure Saturday night, but a valve on the tanker apparently failed.

Manure ran into a road ditch, then into a tributary of Whiskey Creek near Remsen. Pick discovered the spill Monday morning and took steps to stop the flow of manure into the ditch and recover pools of liquid manure in the area.

(Podcast) KJAN News, 4/6/21

News, Podcasts

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The news at 7:07-a.m., w/News Director Ric Hanson.

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Alliant Energy partners with Perry on Iowa’s first customer hosted solar project

News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Perry, Iowa – April 6, 2021 – Alliant Energy and the city of Perry have reached an agreement to install a 1-megawatt solar facility on a 7-acre site on the western edge of the city. On April 5, a lease for the project was approved during the City Council Meeting. Sven Peterson, City Administrator for the City of Perry, says “The City of Perry looks forward to hosting a solar energy project in our community,” said . “Our collaboration with Alliant Energy on this facility will provide financial, environmental and educational benefits to the city and area residents.”

By hosting the solar facility, the City of Perry will receive significant revenue from lease payments for 25 years. The city will also obtain renewable energy credits from the project to offset their greenhouse gas and carbon dioxide emissions and help them progress toward their sustainability goals. Mason Adams, Alliant Energy key account manager, says “We are excited to partner with the city of Perry to support the community and bring more clean energy to our customers. This is the first Alliant Energy® Customer Hosted Renewables solar facility in the state of Iowa. This project is a win-win that will benefit the local economy and the environment for many years to come. It represents our vision to provide a clean energy future for our customers and the communities we serve.”

The solar facility will be located on a remediated brownfield site that the city of Perry has worked to put a renewable energy project on for several years. Alliant Energy will oversee construction of the solar facility and will own, operate and maintain it. There are no upfront, financing or other costs to the city of Perry. It is expected to be operational by mid-2022.