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Soybean
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| Soybean | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Clade: | Angiosperms |
| Clade: | Eudicots |
| Clade: | Rosids |
| Order: | Fabales |
| Family: | Fabaceae |
| Subfamily: | Faboideae |
| Genus: | Glycine |
| Species: | G. max
|
| Binomial name | |
| Glycine max | |
| Synonyms[1] | |
| Soybean | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chinese | 大豆 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Literal meaning | "large bean" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Southern Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 黃豆 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 黄豆 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Literal meaning | "yellow bean" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Vietnamese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Vietnamese alphabet | đậu tương (or đỗ tương) đậu nành | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chữ Hán | 豆漿 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chữ Nôm | 豆𥢃 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Korean name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hangul | 대두 백태(or 흰콩) 메주콩 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hanja | 大豆 白太 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Literal meaning | "large bean" "white bean" "bean for meju" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Japanese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kanji | 大豆[2] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kana | ダイズ | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||
The soybean, soy bean, or soya bean (Glycine max)[3] is a species of legume native to East Asia, widely grown for its edible bean. Soy is a staple crop, the world's most grown legume, and an important animal feed.[4]
Soy is a key source of food, useful both for its protein and oil content. Soybean oil is widely used in cooking, as well as in industry. Traditional unfermented food uses of soybeans include edamame, as well as soy milk, from which tofu and tofu skin are made. Fermented soy foods include soy sauce, fermented bean paste, nattō, and tempeh. Fat-free (defatted) soybean meal is a significant and cheap source of protein for animal feeds and many packaged meals.[4] For example, soybean products, such as textured vegetable protein (TVP), are ingredients in many meat and dairy substitutes.[4][5] Soy based foods are traditionally associated with East Asian cuisines, and still constitute a major part of East Asian diets, but processed soy products are increasingly used in Western cuisines.
Soy was domesticated from the wild soybean (Glycine soja) in north-central China between 6,000–9,000 years ago.[6] Brazil and the United States lead the world in modern soy production. The majority of soybeans are genetically modified,[7] usually for either insect, herbicide, or drought resistance. Three-quarters of soy is used to feed livestock, which in turn go to feed humans. Increasing demand for meat has substantially increased soy production since the 1980's, and contributed to deforestation in the Amazon.
Soybeans contain significant amounts of phytic acid, dietary minerals and B vitamins. Soy may reduce the risk of cancer and heart disease. Some people are allergic to soy. Soy is a complete protein and therefore important in the diets of many vegetarians and vegans. The association of soy with vegans and the misconception that soy increases estrogen production have led to "soy boy" being used as a derogatory term.[8]
Etymology
[edit]The word "soy" derives from the Japanese soi, a regional variant of shōyu, meaning "soy sauce".[9]
The name of the genus, Glycine, comes from Linnaeus. When naming the genus, Linnaeus observed that one of the species formerly within the genus, which has since been reclassified to the genus Apios, had a sweet root. Based on the sweetness, the Greek word for sweet, glykós, was Latinized.[10] The genus name is not related to the amino acid glycine.[citation needed]
Description
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2021) |
Like most plants, soybeans grow in distinct morphological stages as they develop from seeds into fully mature plants.
Germination
[edit]The first stage of growth is germination, a method which first becomes apparent as a seed's radicle emerges.[11] This is the first stage of root growth and occurs within the first 48 hours under ideal growing conditions. The first photosynthetic structures, the cotyledons, develop from the hypocotyl, the first plant structure to emerge from the soil. These cotyledons both act as leaves and as a source of nutrients for the immature plant, providing the seedling nutrition for its first 7 to 10 days.[11]
Maturation
[edit]The first true leaves develop as a pair of single blades.[11] Subsequent to this first pair, mature nodes form compound leaves with three blades. Mature trifoliolate leaves, having three to four leaflets per leaf, are often between 6 and 15 cm (2+1⁄2 and 6 in) long and 2 and 7 cm (1 and 3 in) broad. Under ideal conditions, stem growth continues, producing new nodes every four days. Before flowering, roots can grow 2 cm (3⁄4 in) per day. If rhizobia are present, root nodulation begins by the time the third node appears. Nodulation typically continues for 8 weeks before the symbiotic infection process stabilizes.[11] The final characteristics of a soybean plant are variable, with factors such as genetics, soil quality, and climate affecting its form; however, fully mature soybean plants are generally between 50 and 125 cm (20 and 50 in) in height[12] and have rooting depths between 75 and 150 cm (30 and 60 in).[13]
Flowering
[edit]Flowering is triggered by day length, often beginning once days become shorter than 12.8 hours.[11] This trait is highly variable however, with different varieties reacting differently to changing day length.[14] Soybeans form inconspicuous, self-fertile flowers which are borne in the axil of the leaf and are white, pink or purple. Though they do not require pollination, they are attractive to bees, because they produce nectar that is high in sugar content.[15] Depending on the soybean variety, node growth may cease once flowering begins. Strains that continue nodal development after flowering are termed "indeterminates" and are best suited to climates with longer growing seasons.[11] Often soybeans drop their leaves before the seeds are fully mature.

The fruit is a hairy pod that grows in clusters of three to five, each pod is 3–8 cm (1–3 in) long and usually contains two to four (rarely more) seeds 5–11 mm in diameter. Soybean seeds come in a wide variety of sizes and hull colors such as black, brown, yellow, and green.[12] Variegated and bicolored seed coats are also common.
Seed resilience
[edit]
The hull of the mature bean is hard, water-resistant, and protects the cotyledon and hypocotyl (or "germ") from damage. If the seed coat is cracked, the seed will not germinate. The scar, visible on the seed coat, is called the hilum (colors include black, brown, buff, gray and yellow) and at one end of the hilum is the micropyle, or small opening in the seed coat which can allow the absorption of water for sprouting.
Some seeds such as soybeans containing very high levels of protein can undergo desiccation, yet survive and revive after water absorption. A. Carl Leopold began studying this capability at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell University in the mid-1980s. He found soybeans and corn to have a range of soluble carbohydrates protecting the seed's cell viability.[16] Patents were awarded to him in the early 1990s on techniques for protecting biological membranes and proteins in the dry state.
Chemistry
[edit]Dry soybeans contain 36% protein and 20% fat in form of soybean oil by weight. The remainder consists of 30% carbohydrates, 9% water and 5% ash.[17] Soybeans comprise approximately 8% seed coat or hull, 90% cotyledons and 2% hypocotyl axis or germ.[18][page needed]
Taxonomy
[edit]The genus Glycine may be divided into two subgenera, Glycine and Soja. The subgenus Soja includes the cultivated soybean, G. max, and the wild soybean, treated either as a separate species G. soja,[19] or as the subspecies G. max subsp. soja.[20] The cultivated and wild soybeans are annuals. The wild soybean is native to China, Japan, Korea and Russia.[19] The subgenus Glycine consists of at least 25 wild perennial species: for example, G. canescens and G. tomentella, both found in Australia and Papua New Guinea.[21][22] Perennial soybean (Neonotonia wightii) belongs to a different genus. It originated in Africa and is now a widespread pasture crop in the tropics.[23][24][25]
Like some other crops of long domestication, the relationship of the modern soybean to wild-growing species can no longer be traced with any degree of certainty.[26] It is a cultigen with a very large number of cultivars.[27]
Ecology
[edit]Like many legumes, soybeans can fix atmospheric nitrogen, due to the presence of symbiotic bacteria from the Rhizobia group.[28]
Cultivation
[edit]

This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2021) |
Soybeans are globally important agricultural crops, grown as a major source of protein and oil. It prefers fertile, well-drained soils and requires a warm temperate climate with adequate rainfall or irrigation. Soybeans are mainly grown in the United States, Brazil, and Argentina.
It is usually planted in straight rows using modern machinery, and pests and weeds must be controlled to maintain the crop. After maturity, it is harvested using mechanized harvesting machines. Soybeans are used in the production of many food and industrial products, such as tofu, oils, and feed, in addition to their role in improving soil fertility by fixing nitrogen.
Conditions
[edit]
Cultivation is successful in climates with hot summers, with optimum growing conditions in mean temperatures of 20 to 30 °C (70 to 85 °F); temperatures of below 20 °C (70 °F) and over 40 °C (105 °F) stunt growth significantly. They can grow in a wide range of soils, with optimum growth in moist alluvial soils with good organic content. Soybeans, like most legumes, perform nitrogen fixation by establishing a symbiotic relationship with the bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum (syn. Rhizobium japonicum; Jordan 1982). This ability to fix nitrogen allows farmers to reduce nitrogen fertilizer use and increase yields when growing other crops in rotation with soy.[29] There may be some trade-offs, however, in the long-term abundance of organic material in soils where soy and other crops (for example, corn) are grown in rotation.[30] For best results, though, an inoculum of the correct strain of bacteria should be mixed with the soybean (or any legume) seed before planting. Modern crop cultivars generally reach a height of around 1 m (3 ft), and take 80–120 days from sowing to harvesting.
Soils
[edit]Soil scientists Edson Lobato (Brazil), Andrew McClung (U.S.), and Alysson Paolinelli (Brazil) were awarded the 2006 World Food Prize for transforming the ecologically biodiverse savannah of the Cerrado region of Brazil into highly productive cropland that could grow profitable soybeans.[31][32][33][34]

Contamination concerns
[edit]Human sewage sludge can be used as fertilizer to grow soybeans. Soybeans grown in sewage sludge likely contain elevated concentrations of metals.[35][36]
Pests
[edit]Soybean plants are vulnerable to a wide range of bacterial diseases, fungal diseases, viral diseases, and parasites.
The primary bacterial diseases include bacterial blight, bacterial pustule and downy mildew affecting the soybean plant.[37]
The Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) poses a significant threat to agricultural crops, including soybeans, due to its voracious feeding habits. Found commonly in both urban and suburban areas, these beetles are frequently observed in agricultural landscapes where they can cause considerable damage to crops like corn, soybeans, and various fruits.[38][39]
Soybean cyst nematode (SCN) is the worst pest of soybean in the US. Losses of 30%[40] or 40%[RM 1] are common even without symptoms.
The corn earworm moth and bollworm (Helicoverpa zea) is a common and destructive pest of soybean growth in Virginia.[41]
Soybeans are consumed by whitetail deer which may damage soybean plants through feeding, trampling and bedding, reducing crop yields by as much as 15%.[42] Groundhogs are also a common pest in soybean fields, living in burrows underground and feeding nearby. One den of groundhogs can consume a tenth to a quarter of an acre of soybeans.[43] Chemical repellents or firearms are effective for controlling pests in soybean fields.[42][43]
Soybeans suffer from the fungus Pythium spinosum in Arkansas and Indiana (United States), and China.[44]
In Japan and the United States, the Soybean dwarf virus (SbDV) causes a disease in soybeans and is transmitted by aphids.[45]
Cultivars
[edit]Disease resistant cultivars
[edit]Resistant varieties are available. In Indian cultivars, Nataraj et al. 2020 find that anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum truncatum is resisted by a combination of 2 major genes.[46][47]
PI 88788
[edit]The vast majority of cultivars in the US have soybean cyst nematode resistance (SCN resistance), but rely on only one breeding line (PI 88788) as their sole source of resistance.[RM 2] (The resistance genes provided by PI 88788, Peking, and PI 90763 were characterized in 1997.)[48] As a result, for example, in 2012 only 18 cultivars out of 807 recommended by the Iowa State University Extension had any ancestry outside of PI 88788. By 2020 the situation was still about the same: Of 849 there were 810 with some ancestry from PI 88788,[49][50] 35 from Peking, and only 2 from PI 89772. (On the question of exclusively PI 88788 ancestry, that number was not available for 2020.)[50] That was speculated to be in 2012[RM 3]—and was clearly by 2020[49]—producing SCN populations that are virulent on PI 88788.
Production
[edit]| Soybean production – 2020 (millions of tonnes) | |
|---|---|
| 122 | |
| 113 | |
| 49 | |
| 20 | |
| 11 | |
| 11 | |
| World | 353 |
| Source: FAOSTAT[51] | |
![Production of soybeans (2018)[52]](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1e/PRODUCTION_OF_SOYBEANS_%282018%29.svg/250px-PRODUCTION_OF_SOYBEANS_%282018%29.svg.png)

In 2020, world production of soybeans was over 353 million tonnes, led by Brazil and the United States combined with 66% of the total (table). Production has dramatically increased across the globe since the 1960s, but particularly in South America after a cultivar that grew well in low latitudes was developed in the 1980s.[53] The rapid growth of the industry has been primarily fueled by large increases in worldwide demand for meat products, particularly in developing countries like China, which alone accounts for more than 60% of imports.[54] Soy is a staple crop; global soy production accounts for four times more legume production than all other legumes combined.[55]
Environmental issues
[edit]In spite of the Amazon "Soy Moratorium", soy production continues to play a significant role in deforestation when its indirect impacts are taken into account, as land used to grow soy continues to increase. This land either comes from pasture land (which increasingly supplants forested areas), or areas outside the Amazon not covered by the moratorium, such as the Cerrado region. Roughly one-fifth of deforestation can be attributed to expanding land use to produce oilseeds, primarily for soy and palm oil, whereas the expansion of beef production accounts for 41%. The main driver of deforestation is the global demand for meat, which in turn requires huge tracts of land to grow feed crops for livestock.[56] Around 80% of the global soybean crop is used to feed livestock.[57]
History
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2021) |
Soybeans were a crucial crop in East Asia long before written records began.[58] The origin of soy cultivation remains scientifically debated. The closest living relative of the soybean is Glycine soja (previously called G. ussuriensis), a legume native to central China.[59] Genomic data increasingly supports a single domestication event in north-central China between 6,000 and 9,000 years ago, although some evidence suggests a more complex scenario involving low-intensity pre-domestication cultivation across multiple locations in East Asia, followed by the eventual dominance of the Chinese lineage.[6]
There is evidence for soybean domestication between 7000 and 6600 BC in China, between 5000 and 3000 BC in Japan and 1000 BC in Korea.[60] The first unambiguously domesticated, cultigen-sized soybean was discovered in Korea at the Mumun-period Daundong site.[61][62] Prior to fermented products such as fermented black soybeans (douchi), jiang (Chinese miso), soy sauce, tempeh, nattō, and miso, soy was considered sacred for its beneficial effects in crop rotation, and it was eaten by itself, and as bean curd and soy milk.
Soybeans were introduced to Java in Malay Archipelago circa 13th century or probably earlier. By the 17th century through their trade with Far East, soybeans and its products were traded by European traders (Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch) in Asia, and reached Indian Subcontinent by this period.[citation needed] By the 18th century, soybeans were introduced to the Americas and Europe from China. Soy was introduced to Africa from China in the late 19th century, and is now widespread across the continent.
East Asia
[edit]
Soy was most likely domesticated 6,000–9,000 years ago in the region between the Yellow River and the Huai River in China.[6] The earliest documented evidence for the use of Glycine of any kind comes from charred plant remains of wild soybean recovered from Jiahu in Henan province, a Neolithic site occupied between 9,000 and 7,800 years ago.[61] An abundance of archaeological charred soybean specimens have been found centered around this region.[63]
Soybeans became an important crop by the Zhou dynasty (c. 1046–256 BC) in China. According to an ancient Chinese myth, in 2853 BC, the legendary Emperor Shennong of China proclaimed that five plants were sacred: soybeans, rice, wheat, barley, and millet.[64] Early Chinese records mention that soybeans were a gift from the region of the Yangtze River delta and Southeast China.[65] However, there is no archaeological evidence that soybeans were domesticated in southern China, and it appears that soy was unknown there prior to the Han dynasty.[61]
The oldest preserved soybeans resembling modern varieties in size and shape were found in archaeological sites in Korea dated about 1000 BC.[65][66] Radiocarbon dating of soybean samples recovered through flotation during excavations at the Early Mumun period Okbang site in Korea indicated soybean was cultivated as a food crop in around 1000–900 BC.[66] Soybeans from the Jōmon period in Japan from 3000 BC[61] are also significantly larger than wild varieties.[61][67] The earliest Japanese textual reference to the soybean is in the classic Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters), which was completed in 712 CE.
Southeast Asia
[edit]Soybeans were mentioned as kadêlê (modern Indonesian term: kedelai)[68] in an old Javanese manuscript, Serat Sri Tanjung, which dates to 12th- to 13th-century Java.[69] By the 13th century, the soybean had arrived and cultivated in Indonesia; it probably arrived much earlier however, carried by traders or merchants from Southern China.[70]
The earliest known reference to it as "tempeh" appeared in 1815 in the Serat Centhini manuscript.[71] The development of tempeh fermented soybean cake probably took place earlier, circa 17th century in Java.
Indian subcontinent
[edit]By the 1600s, soy sauce spread from southern Japan across the region through the Dutch East India Company (VOC).


While the origins and history of Soybean cultivation in the Eastern Himalayas is debated, it was potentially introduced from southern China, more specifically Yunnan province.[72][73] Alternatively, it could have reached here through traders from Indonesia via Myanmar. Northeast India is viewed as a passive micro-centre within the soybean secondary gene centre. Central India is considered a tertiary gene centre particularly the area encompassing Madhya Pradesh which is also the country largest soybean producer.[73]
Iberia
[edit]Vocabvlario da Lingoa de Iapam, a Japanese-Portuguese dictionary, was compiled and published in 1603 by Jesuit priests in Nagasaki. It contains short but clear definitions for about 20 words related to soyfoods—the first in any European language.
The Luso-Hispanic traders were familiar with soybeans and soybean product through their trade with Far East since at least the 17th century. However, it was not until the late 19th century that the first attempt to cultivate soybeans in the Iberian peninsula was undertaken. In 1880, the soybean was first cultivated in Portugal in the Botanical Gardens at Coimbra (Crespi 1935).
In about 1910 in Spain the first attempts at Soybean cultivation were made by the Count of San Bernardo, who cultivated soybeans on his estates at Almillo (in southwest Spain) about 48 miles east-northeast of Seville.[74]
North America
[edit]Soybeans were first introduced to North America from China in 1765, by Samuel Bowen, a former East India Company sailor who had visited China in conjunction with James Flint, the first Englishman legally permitted by the Chinese authorities to learn Chinese.[75] The first "New World" soybean crop was grown on Skidaway Island, Georgia, in 1765 by Henry Yonge from seeds given him by Samuel Bowen.[76][77][78] Bowen grew soy near Savannah, Georgia, possibly using funds from Flint, and made soy sauce for sale to England.[79] Although soybean was introduced into North America in 1765, for the next 155 years, the crop was grown primarily for forage.[80]
In 1831, the first soy product "a few dozen India Soy" [sauce] arrived in Canada. Soybeans were probably first cultivated in Canada by 1855, and definitely in 1895 at Ontario Agricultural College.[81]
It was not until Lafayette Mendel and Thomas Burr Osborne showed that the nutritional value of soybean seeds could be increased by cooking, moisture or heat, that soy went from a farm animal feed to a human food.[82][83]
William Joseph Morse is considered the "father" of modern soybean agriculture in America. In 1910, he and Charles Piper began to popularize what was regarded as a relatively unknown Oriental peasant crop in America into a "golden bean", with the soybean becoming one of America's largest and most nutritious farm crops.[84][85][86]

Prior to the 1920s in the US, the soybean was mainly a forage crop, a source of oil, meal (for feed) and industrial products, with very little used as food. However, it took on an important role after World War I. During the Great Depression, the drought-stricken (Dust Bowl) regions of the United States were able to use soy to regenerate their soil because of its nitrogen-fixing properties. Farms were increasing production to meet with government demands, and Henry Ford became a promoter of soybeans.[87] In 1931, Ford hired chemists Robert Boyer and Frank Calvert to produce artificial silk. They succeeded in making a textile fiber of spun soy protein fibers, hardened or tanned in a formaldehyde bath, which was given the name Azlon. It never reached the commercial market. Soybean oil was used by Ford in paint for the automobiles,[88] as well as a fluid for shock absorbers.
During World War II, soybeans became important in both North America and Europe chiefly as substitutes for other protein foods and as a source of edible oil. During the war, the soybean was discovered as fertilizer due to nitrogen fixation by the United States Department of Agriculture.
Prior to the 1970s, Asian-Americans and Seventh-Day Adventists were essentially the only users of soy foods in the United States.[89] "The soy foods movement began in small pockets of the counterculture, notably the Tennessee commune named simply The Farm, but by the mid-1970s a vegetarian revival helped it gain momentum and even popular awareness through books such as The Book of Tofu."[90]
Although practically unseen in 1900, by 2000 soybean plantings covered more than 70 million acres,[91] second only to corn, and it became America's largest cash crop.[citation needed] In 2021, 87,195,000 acres were planted, with the largest acreage in the states of Illinois, Iowa, and Minnesota.[92]
Caribbean and West Indies
[edit]The soybean arrived in the Caribbean in the form of soy sauce made by Samuel Bowen in Savannah, Georgia, in 1767. It remains only a minor crop there, but its uses for human food are growing steadily.[93]
Mediterranean area
[edit]The soybean was first cultivated in Italy by 1760 in the Botanical Garden of Turin. During the 1780s, it was grown in at least three other botanical gardens in Italy.[94] The first soybean product, soy oil, arrived in Anatolia during 1909 under Ottoman Empire.[95] The first clear cultivation occurred in 1931.[95] This was also the first time that soybeans were cultivated in Middle East.[95] By 1939, soybeans were cultivated in Greece.[96][97]
Australia
[edit]Wild soybeans were discovered in northeastern Australia in 1770 by explorers Banks and Solander. In 1804, the first soyfood product ("Fine India Soy" [sauce]) was sold in Sydney. In 1879, the first domesticated soybeans arrived in Australia, a gift of the Minister of the Interior Department, Japan.[98]
France
[edit]The soybean was first cultivated in France by 1779 (and perhaps as early as 1740). The two key early people and organizations introducing the soybean to France were the Society of Acclimatization (starting in 1855) and Li Yu-ying (from 1910). Li started a large tofu factory, where the first commercial soyfoods in France were made.[99]
Africa
[edit]The soybean first arrived in Africa via Egypt in 1857.[100] Soya Meme (Baked Soya) is produced in the village called Bame Awudome near Ho, the capital of the Volta Region of Ghana, by the Ewe people of Southeastern Ghana and southern Togo.
Central Europe
[edit]In 1873, Professor Friedrich J. Haberlandt first became interested in soybeans when he obtained the seeds of 19 soybean varieties at the Vienna World Exposition (Wiener Weltausstellung). He cultivated these seeds in Vienna, and soon began to distribute them throughout Central and Western Europe. In 1875, he first grew the soybeans in Vienna, then in early 1876 he sent samples of seeds to seven cooperators in central Europe, who planted and tested the seeds in the spring of 1876, with good or fairly good results in each case.[101] Most of the farmers who received seeds from him cultivated them, then reported their results. Starting in February 1876, he published these results first in various journal articles, and finally in his magnum opus, Die Sojabohne (The Soybean) in 1878.[101] In northern Europe, lupin (lupine) is known as the "soybean of the north".[102]
Central Asia
[edit]The soybean is first in cultivated Transcaucasia in Central Asia in 1876, by the Dungans. This region has never been important for soybean production.[103]
Central America
[edit]The first reliable reference to the soybean in this region dates from Mexico in 1877.[104]
South America
[edit]The soybean first arrived in South America in Argentina in 1882.[105]
Andrew McClung showed in the early 1950s that with soil amendments the Cerrado region of Brazil would grow soybeans.[106] In June 1973, when soybean futures markets mistakenly portended a major shortage, the Nixon administration imposed an embargo on soybean exports. It lasted only a week, but Japanese buyers felt that they could not rely on U.S. supplies, and the rival Brazilian soybean industry came into existence.[107][87] This led Brazil to become the world's largest producer of soybeans in 2020, with 131 million tons.[108]
Industrial soy production in South America is characterized by wealthy management who live far away from the production site which they manage remotely. In Brazil, these managers depend heavily on advanced technology and machinery, and agronomic practices such as zero tillage, high pesticide use, and intense fertilization. One contributing factor is the increased attention on the Brazilian Cerrado in Bahia, Brazil by US farmers in the early 2000s. This was due to rising values of scarce farmland and high production costs in the US Midwest. There were many promotions of the Brazilian Cerrado by US farm producer magazines and market consultants who portrayed it as having cheap land with ideal production conditions, with infrastructure being the only thing it was lacking. These same magazines also presented Brazilian soy as inevitably out-competing American soy. Another draw to investing was the insider information about the climate and market in Brazil. A few dozen American farmers purchased varying amounts of land by a variety of means including finding investors and selling off land holdings. Many followed the ethanol company model and formed an LLC with investments from neighboring farmers, friends, and family while some turned to investment companies. Some soy farmers either liquidated their Brazilian assets or switched to remote management from the US to return to farming there and implement new farming and business practices to make their US farms more productive. Others planned to sell their now expensive Bahia land to buy land cheaper land in the frontier regions of Piauí or Tocantins to create more soybean farms.[109]
Genetics
[edit]Chinese landraces were found to have a slightly higher genetic diversity than inbred lines by Li et al., 2010.[110] Specific locus amplified fragment sequencing (SLAF-seq) has been used by Han et al., 2015 to study the genetic history of the domestication process, perform genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of agronomically relevant traits, and produce high-density linkage maps.[111] An SNP array was developed by Song et al., 2013 and has been used for research and breeding;[112] the same team applied their array in Song et al., 2015 against the USDA Soybean Germplasm Collection and obtained mapping data that are expected to yield association mapping data for such traits.[110]
Rpp1-R1 is a resistance gene against soybean rust.[113] Rpp1-R1 is an R gene (NB-LRR) providing resistance against the rust pathogen Phakopsora pachyrhizi.[113] Its synthesis product includes a ULP1 protease.[113]
Qijian et al., 2017 provides the SoySNP50K gene array.[114][115]
Genetic modification
[edit]
Soybeans are one of the "biotech food" crops that have been genetically modified, and genetically modified soybeans are being used in an increasing number of products. In 1995, Monsanto company introduced glyphosate-tolerant soybeans that have been genetically modified to be resistant to Monsanto's glyphosate herbicides through substitution of the Agrobacterium sp. (strain CP4) gene EPSP (5-enolpyruvyl shikimic acid-3-phosphate) synthase. The substituted version is not sensitive to glyphosate.[116]
In 1997, about 8% of all soybeans cultivated for the commercial market in the United States were genetically modified. In 2010, the figure was 93%.[117] As with other glyphosate-tolerant crops, concern is expressed over damage to biodiversity.[118] A 2003 study[119] concluded the "Roundup Ready" (RR) gene had been bred into so many different soybean cultivars, there had been little decline in genetic diversity, but "diversity was limited among elite lines from some companies".
The widespread use of such types of GM soybeans in the Americas has caused problems with exports to some regions. GM crops require extensive certification before they can be legally imported into the European Union, where there is considerable supplier and consumer reluctance to use GM products for consumer or animal use. Difficulties with coexistence and subsequent traces of cross-contamination of non-GM stocks have caused shipments to be rejected and have put a premium on non-GM soy.[120]
A 2006 United States Department of Agriculture report found the adoption of genetically engineered (GE) soy, corn and cotton reduced the amount of pesticides used overall, but did result in a slightly greater amount of herbicides used for soy specifically. The use of GE soy was also associated with greater conservation tillage, indirectly leading to better soil conservation, as well as increased income from off-farming sources due to the greater ease with which the crops can be managed. Though the overall estimated benefits of the adoption of GE soybeans in the United States was $310 million, the majority of this benefit was experienced by the companies selling the seeds (40%), followed by biotechnology firms (28%) and farmers (20%).[121] The patent on glyphosate-tolerant soybeans expired in 2014,[122] so benefits can be expected to shift.[123]
Adverse effects
[edit]Soy allergy
[edit]Allergy to soy is common, and the food is listed with other foods that commonly cause allergy, such as milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, and shellfish. The problem has been reported among younger children, and the diagnosis of soy allergy is often based on symptoms reported by parents and results of skin tests or blood tests for allergy. Only a few reported studies have attempted to confirm allergy to soy by direct challenge with the food under controlled conditions.[124] It is very difficult to give a reliable estimate of the true prevalence of soy allergy in the general population. To the extent that it does exist, soy allergy may cause cases of urticaria and angioedema, usually within minutes to hours of ingestion. In rare cases, true anaphylaxis may also occur. The reason for the discrepancy is likely that soy proteins, the causative factor in allergy, are far less potent at triggering allergy symptoms than the proteins of peanut and shellfish.[125] An allergy test that is positive demonstrates that the immune system has formed IgE antibodies to soy proteins. However, this is only a factor when soy proteins reach the blood without being digested, in sufficient quantities to reach a threshold to provoke actual symptoms.
Soy can also trigger symptoms via food intolerance, a situation where no allergic mechanism can be proven. One scenario is seen in very young infants who have vomiting and diarrhoea when fed soy-based formula, which resolves when the formula is withdrawn. Older infants can suffer a more severe disorder with vomiting, diarrhoea that may be bloody, anemia, weight loss and failure to thrive. The most common cause of this unusual disorder is a sensitivity to cow's milk, but soy formulas can also be the trigger. The precise mechanism is unclear and it could be immunologic, although not through the IgE-type antibodies that have the leading role in urticaria and anaphylaxis. However, it is also self-limiting and will often disappear in the toddler years.[126]
In the European Union, identifying the presence of soy either as an ingredient or unintended contaminant in packaged food is compulsory. The regulation (EC) 1169/2011 on food-labeling lists 14 allergens, including soy, in packaged food must be clearly indicated on the label as part of the list of ingredients, using a distinctive typography (such as bold type or capital letters).[127]
Thyroid function
[edit]One review noted that soy-based foods may inhibit absorption of thyroid hormone medications required for treatment of hypothyroidism.[128] A 2015 scientific review by the European Food Safety Authority concluded that intake of isoflavones from supplements did not affect thyroid hormone levels in postmenopausal women.[129]
Uses
[edit]

Among the legumes, the soybean is valued for its high (38–45%) protein content as well as its high (approximately 20%) oil content. Soybeans are the most valuable agricultural export of the United States.[130] Approximately 85% of the world's soybean crop is processed into soybean meal and soybean oil, the remainder processed in other ways or eaten whole.[131]
Soybeans can be broadly classified as "vegetable" (garden) or field (oil) types. Vegetable types cook more easily, have a mild, nutty flavor, and better texture, are larger in size, higher in protein, and are lower in oil than field types. Tofu, soy milk, and soy sauce are among the top edible commodities made using soybeans. Producers prefer the higher protein cultivars bred from vegetable soybeans originally brought to the United States in the late 1930s. The "garden" cultivars are generally not suitable for mechanical combine harvesting because there is a tendency for the pods to shatter upon reaching maturity.
Nutrition
[edit]| Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy | 1,866 kJ (446 kcal) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
30.16 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sugars | 7.33 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dietary fiber | 9.3 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
19.94 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Saturated | 2.884 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Monounsaturated | 4.404 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Polyunsaturated | 11.255 g 1.330 g 9.925 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
36.49 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Other constituents | Quantity | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water | 8.54 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Cholesterol | 0 mg | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| †Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[132] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[133] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
A 100-gram reference quantity of raw soybeans supplies 1,866 kilojoules (446 kilocalories) of food energy and are 9% water, 30% carbohydrates, 20% total fat and 36% protein. Peanuts are the only legumes with a higher fat content (48%) and calorie count (2,385 kJ). They contain less carbohydrates (21%), protein (25%) and dietary fiber (9%).
Soybeans are a rich source of essential nutrients, providing in a 100-gram serving (raw, for reference) high contents of the Daily Value (DV) especially for protein (36% DV), dietary fiber (37%), iron (121%), manganese (120%), phosphorus (101%) and several B vitamins, including folate (94%) (table). High contents also exist for vitamin K, magnesium, zinc and potassium.
For human consumption, soybeans must be processed prior to consumption–either by cooking, roasting, or fermenting–to destroy the trypsin inhibitors (serine protease inhibitors).[134] Raw soybeans, including the immature green form, are toxic to all monogastric animals.[135]
Protein
[edit]Most soy protein is a relatively heat-stable storage protein. This heat stability enables soy food products requiring high temperature cooking, such as tofu, soy milk and textured vegetable protein (soy flour) to be made. Soy protein is essentially identical to the protein of other legume seeds and pulses.[136][137]
Soy is a good source of protein for vegetarians and vegans or for people who want to reduce the amount of meat they eat, according to the US Food and Drug Administration:[138]
Soy protein products can be good substitutes for animal products because, unlike some other beans, soy offers a 'complete' protein profile. ... Soy protein products can replace animal-based foods—which also have complete proteins but tend to contain more fat, especially saturated fat—without requiring major adjustments elsewhere in the diet.
Although soybeans have high protein content, soybeans also contain high levels of protease inhibitors, which can prevent digestion.[139] Protease inhibitors are reduced by cooking soybeans, and are present in low levels in soy products such as tofu and soy milk.[139]
The Protein Digestibility Corrected Amino Acid Score (PDCAAS) of soy protein is the nutritional equivalent of meat, eggs, and casein for human growth and health. Soybean protein isolate has a biological value of 74, whole soybeans 96, soybean milk 91, and eggs 97.[140]

All spermatophytes, except for the family of grasses and cereals (Poaceae), contain 7S (vicilin) and 11S (legumin) soy protein-like globulin storage proteins; or only one of these globulin proteins. S denotes Svedberg, sedimentation coefficients. Oats and rice are anomalous in that they also contain a majority of soybean-like protein.[141] Cocoa, for example, contains the 7S globulin, which contributes to cocoa/chocolate taste and aroma,[142][143][144] whereas coffee beans (coffee grounds) contain the 11S globulin responsible for coffee's aroma and flavor.[145][146]
Vicilin and legumin proteins belong to the cupin superfamily, a large family of functionally diverse proteins that have a common origin and whose evolution can be followed from bacteria to eukaryotes including animals and higher plants.[147]
2S albumins form a major group of homologous storage proteins in many dicot species and in some monocots but not in grasses (cereals).[148] Soybeans contain a small but significant 2S storage protein.[149][150][151] 2S albumin are grouped in the prolamin superfamily.[152] Other allergenic proteins included in this 'superfamily' are the non-specific plant lipid transfer proteins, alpha amylase inhibitor, trypsin inhibitors, and prolamin storage proteins of cereals and grasses.[141]
Peanuts, for instance, contain 20% 2S albumin but only 6% 7S globulin and 74% 11S.[148] It is the high 2S albumin and low 7S globulin that is responsible for the relatively low lysine content of peanut protein compared to soy protein.
Carbohydrates
[edit]The principal soluble carbohydrates of mature soybeans are the disaccharide sucrose (range 2.5–8.2%), the trisaccharide raffinose (0.1–1.0%) composed of one sucrose molecule connected to one molecule of galactose, and the tetrasaccharide stachyose (1.4 to 4.1%) composed of one sucrose connected to two molecules of galactose.[citation needed] While the oligosaccharides raffinose and stachyose protect the viability of the soybean seed from desiccation (see above section on physical characteristics) they are not digestible sugars, so contribute to flatulence and abdominal discomfort in humans and other monogastric animals, comparable to the disaccharide trehalose. Undigested oligosaccharides are broken down in the intestine by native microbes, producing gases such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and methane.
Since soluble soy carbohydrates are found in the whey and are broken down during fermentation, soy concentrate, soy protein isolates, tofu, soy sauce, and sprouted soybeans are without flatus activity. On the other hand, there may be some beneficial effects to ingesting oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose, namely, encouraging indigenous bifidobacteria in the colon against putrefactive bacteria.
The insoluble carbohydrates in soybeans consist of the complex polysaccharides cellulose, hemicellulose, and pectin. The majority of soybean carbohydrates can be classed as belonging to dietary fiber.
Fats
[edit]Raw soybeans are 20% fat, including saturated fat (3%), monounsaturated fat (4%) and polyunsaturated fat, mainly as linoleic acid (table).
Within soybean oil or the lipid portion of the seed is contained four phytosterols: stigmasterol, sitosterol, campesterol, and brassicasterol accounting for about 2.5% of the lipid fraction; and which can be converted into steroid hormones.[citation needed] Additionally soybeans are a rich source of sphingolipids.[153]
Other constituents
[edit]Soy contains isoflavones—polyphenolic compounds, produced by legumes including peanuts and chickpeas. Isoflavones are closely related to flavonoids found in other plants, vegetables and flowers.[154]
Soy contains the phytoestrogen coumestans, also are found in beans and split-peas, with the best sources being alfalfa, clover, and soybean sprouts. Coumestrol, an isoflavone coumarin derivative, is the only coumestan in foods.[155][156]
Saponins, a class of natural surfactants (soaps), are sterols that are present in small amounts in various plant foods, including soybeans, other legumes, and cereals, such as oats.[157][158]
Comparison to other major staple foods
[edit]The following table shows the nutrient content of green soybean and other major staple foods, each in respective raw form on a dry weight basis to account for their different water contents. Raw soybeans, however, are not edible and cannot be digested. These must be sprouted, or prepared and cooked for human consumption. In sprouted and cooked form, the relative nutritional and anti-nutritional contents of each of these grains is remarkably different from that of raw form of these grains reported in this table. The nutritional value of soybean and each cooked staple depends on the processing and the method of cooking: boiling, frying, roasting, baking, etc.
| Staple | Maize (corn)[A] | Rice, white[B] | Wheat[C] | Potatoes[D] | Cassava[E] | Soybeans, green[F] | Sweet potatoes[G] | Yams[Y] | Sorghum[H] | Plantain[Z] | RDA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water content (%) | 10 | 12 | 13 | 79 | 60 | 68 | 77 | 70 | 9 | 65 | |
| Raw grams per 100 g dry weight | 111 | 114 | 115 | 476 | 250 | 313 | 435 | 333 | 110 | 286 | |
| Nutrient | |||||||||||
| Energy (kJ) | 1698 | 1736 | 1574 | 1533 | 1675 | 1922 | 1565 | 1647 | 1559 | 1460 | 8,368–10,460 |
| Protein (g) | 10.4 | 8.1 | 14.5 | 9.5 | 3.5 | 40.6 | 7.0 | 5.0 | 12.4 | 3.7 | 50 |
| Fat (g) | 5.3 | 0.8 | 1.8 | 0.4 | 0.7 | 21.6 | 0.2 | 0.6 | 3.6 | 1.1 | 44–77 |
| Carbohydrates (g) | 82 | 91 | 82 | 81 | 95 | 34 | 87 | 93 | 82 | 91 | 130 |
| Fiber (g) | 8.1 | 1.5 | 14.0 | 10.5 | 4.5 | 13.1 | 13.0 | 13.7 | 6.9 | 6.6 | 30 |
| Sugar (g) | 0.7 | 0.1 | 0.5 | 3.7 | 4.3 | 0.0 | 18.2 | 1.7 | 0.0 | 42.9 | minimal |
| Minerals | [A] | [B] | [C] | [D] | [E] | [F] | [G] | [Y] | [H] | [Z] | RDA |
| Calcium (mg) | 8 | 32 | 33 | 57 | 40 | 616 | 130 | 57 | 31 | 9 | 1,000 |
| Iron (mg) | 3.01 | 0.91 | 3.67 | 3.71 | 0.68 | 11.09 | 2.65 | 1.80 | 4.84 | 1.71 | 8 |
| Magnesium (mg) | 141 | 28 | 145 | 110 | 53 | 203 | 109 | 70 | 0 | 106 | 400 |
| Phosphorus (mg) | 233 | 131 | 331 | 271 | 68 | 606 | 204 | 183 | 315 | 97 | 700 |
| Potassium (mg) | 319 | 131 | 417 | 2005 | 678 | 1938 | 1465 | 2720 | 385 | 1426 | 4700 |
| Sodium (mg) | 39 | 6 | 2 | 29 | 35 | 47 | 239 | 30 | 7 | 11 | 1,500 |
| Zinc (mg) | 2.46 | 1.24 | 3.05 | 1.38 | 0.85 | 3.09 | 1.30 | 0.80 | 0.00 | 0.40 | 11 |
| Copper (mg) | 0.34 | 0.25 | 0.49 | 0.52 | 0.25 | 0.41 | 0.65 | 0.60 | - | 0.23 | 0.9 |
| Manganese (mg) | 0.54 | 1.24 | 4.59 | 0.71 | 0.95 | 1.72 | 1.13 | 1.33 | - | - | 2.3 |
| Selenium (μg) | 17.2 | 17.2 | 81.3 | 1.4 | 1.8 | 4.7 | 2.6 | 2.3 | 0.0 | 4.3 | 55 |
| Vitamins | [A] | [B] | [C] | [D] | [E] | [F] | [G] | [Y] | [H] | [Z] | RDA |
| Vitamin C (mg) | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 93.8 | 51.5 | 90.6 | 10.4 | 57.0 | 0.0 | 52.6 | 90 |
| Thiamin (B1) (mg) | 0.43 | 0.08 | 0.34 | 0.38 | 0.23 | 1.38 | 0.35 | 0.37 | 0.26 | 0.14 | 1.2 |
| Riboflavin (B2) (mg) | 0.22 | 0.06 | 0.14 | 0.14 | 0.13 | 0.56 | 0.26 | 0.10 | 0.15 | 0.14 | 1.3 |
| Niacin (B3) (mg) | 4.03 | 1.82 | 6.28 | 5.00 | 2.13 | 5.16 | 2.43 | 1.83 | 3.22 | 1.97 | 16 |
| Pantothenic acid (B5) (mg) | 0.47 | 1.15 | 1.09 | 1.43 | 0.28 | 0.47 | 3.48 | 1.03 | - | 0.74 | 5 |
| Vitamin B6 (mg) | 0.69 | 0.18 | 0.34 | 1.43 | 0.23 | 0.22 | 0.91 | 0.97 | - | 0.86 | 1.3 |
| Folate Total (B9) (μg) | 21 | 9 | 44 | 76 | 68 | 516 | 48 | 77 | 0 | 63 | 400 |
| Vitamin A (IU) | 238 | 0 | 10 | 10 | 33 | 563 | 4178 | 460 | 0 | 3220 | 5000 |
| Vitamin E, alpha-tocopherol (mg) | 0.54 | 0.13 | 1.16 | 0.05 | 0.48 | 0.00 | 1.13 | 1.30 | 0.00 | 0.40 | 15 |
| Vitamin K1 (μg) | 0.3 | 0.1 | 2.2 | 9.0 | 4.8 | 0.0 | 7.8 | 8.7 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 120 |
| Beta-carotene (μg) | 108 | 0 | 6 | 5 | 20 | 0 | 36996 | 277 | 0 | 1306 | 10500 |
| Lutein+zeaxanthin (μg) | 1506 | 0 | 253 | 38 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 86 | 6000 |
| Fats | [A] | [B] | [C] | [D] | [E] | [F] | [G] | [Y] | [H] | [Z] | RDA |
| Saturated fatty acids (g) | 0.74 | 0.20 | 0.30 | 0.14 | 0.18 | 2.47 | 0.09 | 0.13 | 0.51 | 0.40 | minimal |
| Monounsaturated fatty acids (g) | 1.39 | 0.24 | 0.23 | 0.00 | 0.20 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.03 | 1.09 | 0.09 | 22–55 |
| Polyunsaturated fatty acids (g) | 2.40 | 0.20 | 0.72 | 0.19 | 0.13 | 10.00 | 0.04 | 0.27 | 1.51 | 0.20 | 13–19 |
| [A] | [B] | [C] | [D] | [E] | [F] | [G] | [Y] | [H] | [Z] | RDA |
A raw yellow dent corn
B raw unenriched long-grain white rice
C raw hard red winter wheat
D raw potato with flesh and skin
E raw cassava
F raw green soybeans
G raw sweet potato
H raw sorghum
Y raw yam
Z raw plantains
/* unofficial
Soybean oil
[edit]Soybean seed contains 18–19% oil.[160] To extract soybean oil from seed, the soybeans are cracked, adjusted for moisture content, rolled into flakes, and solvent-extracted with commercial hexane.[161] The oil is then refined, blended for different applications, and sometimes hydrogenated. Soybean oils, both liquid and partially hydrogenated, are exported abroad, sold as "vegetable oil," or end up in a wide variety of processed foods.
Soybean meal
[edit]Soybean meal, or soymeal, is the material remaining after solvent extraction of oil from soybean flakes, with a 50% soy protein content. The meal is 'toasted' (a misnomer because the heat treatment is with moist steam) and ground in a hammer mill. Ninety-seven percent of soybean meal production globally is used as livestock feed.[160] Soybean meal is also used in some dog foods.[162]
Livestock feed
[edit]One of the major uses of soybeans globally is as livestock feed, predominantly in the form of soybean meal. In the European Union, for example, though it does not make up most of the weight of livestock feed, soybean meal provides around 60% of the protein fed to livestock.[163] In the United States, 70 percent of soybean production is used for animal feed, with poultry being the number one livestock sector of soybean consumption.[164] Spring grasses are rich in omega-3 fatty acids, whereas soy is predominantly omega-6. The soybean hulls, which mainly consist of the outer coats of the beans removed before oil extraction, can also be fed to livestock and whole soybean seeds after processing.[165][166]
Food for human consumption
[edit]
In addition to their use in livestock feed, soybean products are widely used for human consumption. Common soybean products include soy sauce, soy milk, tofu, soy meal, soy flour, textured vegetable protein (TVP), soy curls, tempeh, soy lecithin and soybean oil. Soybeans may also be eaten with minimal processing, for example, in the Japanese food edamame (枝豆, edamame), in which immature soybeans are boiled whole in their pods and served with salt.



In China, Japan, Vietnam and Korea, soybean and soybean products are a standard part of the diet.[167] Tofu (豆腐 dòufu) is thought to have originated in China, along with soy sauce and several varieties of soybean paste used as seasonings.[citation needed] Japanese foods made from soya include miso (味噌), nattō (納豆), kinako (黄粉) and edamame (枝豆), as well as products made with tofu such as atsuage and aburaage. In China, whole dried soybeans are sold in supermarkets and used to cook various dishes, usually after rehydration by soaking in water; they find their use in soup or as a savory dish. In Korean cuisine, soybean sprouts (콩나물 [ko] kongnamul) are used in a variety of dishes, and soybeans are the base ingredient in doenjang, cheonggukjang and ganjang. In Vietnam, soybeans are used to make soybean paste (tương) in the North with the most popular products are tương Bần, tương Nam Đàn, tương Cự Đà as a garnish for phở and gỏi cuốn dishes, as well as tofu (đậu hũ or đậu phụ or tàu hũ), soy sauce (nước tương), soy milk (nước đậu in the North or sữa đậu nành in the South), and đậu hũ nước đường (tofu sweet soup).
Flour
[edit]Soy flour refers to soybeans ground finely enough to pass through a 100-mesh or smaller screen where special care was taken during desolventizing (not toasted) to minimize denaturation of the protein to retain a high protein dispersibility index, for uses such as food extrusion of textured vegetable protein.[168] It is the starting material for soy concentrate and protein isolate production.
Soy flour can also be made by roasting the soybean, removing the coat (hull), and grinding it into flour. Soy flour is manufactured with different fat levels.[169] Alternatively, raw soy flour omits the roasting step.
- Defatted soy flour is obtained from solvent extracted flakes and contains less than 1% oil.[169]
- "Natural or full-fat soy flour is made from unextracted, dehulled beans and contains about 18% to 20% oil."[169] Its high oil content requires the use of a specialized Alpine Fine Impact Mill to grind rather than the usual hammer mill. Full-fat soy flour has a lower protein concentration than defatted flour. Extruded full-fat soy flour, ground in an Alpine mill, can replace/extend eggs in baking and cooking.[170][171] Full-fat soy flour is a component of Cornell bread.[172][173][174]
- Low-fat soy flour is made by adding some oil back into defatted soy flour. Fat levels range from 4.5% to 9%.[169]
- High-fat soy flour can also be produced by adding back soybean oil to defatted flour, usually at 15%.[175]
Soy lecithin can be added (up to 15%) to soy flour to make lecithinated soy flour. It increases dispersibility and gives it emulsifying properties.[169]
Soy flour has 50% protein and 5% fiber. It has higher levels of protein, thiamine, riboflavin, phosphorus, calcium, and iron than wheat flour. It does not contain gluten.[169] As a result, yeast-raised breads made with soy flour are dense in texture. Among many uses, soy flour thickens sauces, prevents staling in baked food, and reduces oil absorption during frying. Baking food with soy flour gives it tenderness, moistness, a rich color, and a fine texture.[169]
Soy grits are similar to soy flour, except the soybeans have been toasted and cracked into coarse pieces.
Kinako is a soy flour used in Japanese cuisine.
Section reference: Circle & Smith (1972, p. 442)
Soy-based infant formula
[edit]Soy-based infant formula (SBIF) is sometimes given to infants who are not being strictly breastfed; it can be useful for infants who are either allergic to pasteurized cow milk proteins or who are being fed a vegan diet. It is sold in powdered, ready-to-feed, and concentrated liquid forms.
Some reviews have expressed the opinion that more research is needed to determine what effect the phytoestrogens in soybeans may have on infants.[176] Diverse studies have concluded there are no adverse effects in human growth, development, or reproduction as a result of the consumption of soy-based infant formula.[177][178][179] One of these studies, published in the Journal of Nutrition,[179] concludes that there are:
... no clinical concerns with respect to nutritional adequacy, sexual development, neurobehavioral development, immune development, or thyroid disease. SBIFs provide complete nutrition that adequately supports normal infant growth and development. FDA has accepted SBIFs as safe for use as the sole source of nutrition.
Meat and dairy alternatives and extenders
[edit]

Soybeans can be processed to produce a texture and appearance similar to many other foods. For example, soybeans are the primary ingredient in many dairy product substitutes (e.g., soy milk, margarine, soy ice cream, soy yogurt, soy cheese, and soy cream cheese) and meat alternatives (e.g. veggie burgers). These substitutes are readily available in most supermarkets. Soy milk does not naturally contain significant amounts of digestible calcium. Many manufacturers of soy milk sell calcium-enriched products, as well.
Soy products also are used as a low-cost substitute for meat and poultry products.[180][181] Food service, retail and institutional (primarily school lunch and correctional) facilities regularly use such "extended" products. The extension may result in diminished flavor, but fat and cholesterol are reduced. Vitamin and mineral fortification can be used to make soy products nutritionally equivalent to animal protein; the protein quality is already roughly equivalent. The soy-based meat substitute textured vegetable protein has been used for more than 50 years as a way of inexpensively extending ground beef without reducing its nutritional value.[5][182][183]
Soy nut butter
[edit]The soybean is used to make a product called soy nut butter which is similar in texture to peanut butter.[184]
Sweetened soybean
[edit]Sweet-boiled beans are popular in Japan and Korea, and the sweet-boiled soybeans are called "Daizu no Nimame" in Japan and Kongjorim (Korean: 콩조림) in Korea. Sweet-boiled beans are even used in sweetened buns, especially in Mame Pan.
The boiled and pasted edamame, called Zunda, is used as one of the Sweet bean pastes in Japanese confections.
Coffee substitute
[edit]Roasted and ground soybeans can be a caffeine-free substitute for coffee. After the soybeans are roasted and ground, they look similar to regular coffee beans or can be used as a powder similar to instant coffee, with the aroma and flavor of roasted soybeans.[185]
Other products
[edit]
Soybeans with black hulls are used in Chinese fermented black beans, douchi, not to be confused with black turtle beans.
Soybeans are also used in industrial products, including oils, soap, cosmetics, resins, plastics, inks, crayons, solvents, and clothing. Soybean oil is the primary source of biodiesel in the United States, accounting for 80% of domestic biodiesel production.[186] Soybeans have also been used since 2001 as fermenting stock in the manufacture of a brand of vodka.[187] In 1936, Ford Motor Company developed a method where soybeans and fibers were rolled together producing a soup which was then pressed into various parts for their cars, from the distributor cap to knobs on the dashboard. Ford also informed in public relation releases that in 1935 over five million acres (20,000 km2) was dedicated to growing soybeans in the United States.[188]
Potential health benefits
[edit]Reducing risk of cancer
[edit]According to the American Cancer Society, "There is growing evidence that eating traditional soy foods such as tofu may lower the risk of cancers of the breast, prostate, or endometrium (lining of the uterus), and there is some evidence it may lower the risk of certain other cancers." There is insufficient research to indicate whether taking soy dietary supplements (e.g., as a pill or capsule) has any effect on health or cancer risk.[189]
As of 2018, rigorous dietary clinical research in people with cancer has proved inconclusive.[154][190][191][192][193]
Breast cancer
[edit]Although considerable research has examined the potential for soy consumption to lower the risk of breast cancer in women, as of 2016 there is insufficient evidence to reach a conclusion about a relationship between soy consumption and any effects on breast cancer.[154] A 2011 meta-analysis stated: "Our study suggests soy isoflavones intake is associated with a significant reduced risk of breast cancer incidence in Asian populations, but not in Western populations."[194]
Gastrointestinal and colorectal cancer
[edit]Reviews of preliminary clinical trials on people with colorectal or gastrointestinal cancer suggest that soy isoflavones may have a slight protective effect against such cancers.[190][191]
Prostate cancer
[edit]A 2016 review concluded that "current evidence from observational studies and small clinical trials is not robust enough to understand whether soy protein or isoflavone supplements may help prevent or inhibit the progression of prostate cancer."[154] A 2010 review showed that neither soy foods nor isoflavone supplements alter measures of bioavailable testosterone or estrogen concentrations in men.[195] Soy consumption has been shown to have no effect on the levels and quality of sperm.[196] Meta-analyses on the association between soy consumption and prostate cancer risk in men concluded that dietary soy may lower the risk of prostate cancer.[197][193]
Cardiovascular health
[edit]The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted the following health claim for soy: "25 grams of soy protein a day, as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, may reduce the risk of heart disease."[138] One serving, (1 cup or 240 mL) of soy milk, for instance, contains 6 or 7 grams of soy protein.
An American Heart Association (AHA) review of a decade long study of soy protein benefits did not recommend isoflavone supplementation. The review panel also found that soy isoflavones have not been shown to reduce post-menopausal "hot flashes" and the efficacy and safety of isoflavones to help prevent cancers of the breast, uterus or prostate is in question. AHA concluded that "many soy products should be beneficial to cardiovascular and overall health because of their high content of polyunsaturated fats, fiber, vitamins, and minerals and low content of saturated fat".[198] Other studies found that soy protein consumption could lower the concentration of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) transporting fats in the extracellular water to cells.[199][200]
Research by constituent
[edit]Lignans
[edit]Plant lignans are associated with high fiber foods such as cereal brans and beans are the principal precursor to mammalian lignans which have an ability to bind to human estrogen sites. Soybeans are a significant source of mammalian lignan precursor secoisolariciresinol containing 13–273 μg/100 g dry weight.[201]
Phytochemicals
[edit]Soybeans and processed soy foods are among the richest foods in total phytoestrogens (wet basis per 100 g), which are present primarily in the form of the isoflavones, daidzein and genistein.[154][202] Because most naturally occurring phytoestrogens act as selective estrogen receptor modulators, or SERMs, which do not necessarily act as direct agonists of estrogen receptors, normal consumption of foods that contain these phytoestrogens should not provide sufficient amounts to elicit a physiological response in humans.[203][204] The major product of daidzein microbial metabolism is equol.[205] Only 33% of Western Europeans have a microbiome that produces equol, compared to 50–55% of Asians.[205]
Soy isoflavones—polyphenolic compounds that are also produced by other legumes like peanuts and chickpeas[154]—are under preliminary research. As of 2016, no cause-and-effect relationship has been shown in clinical research to indicate that soy isoflavones lower the risk of cardiovascular diseases.[154][198][206]
Phytic acid
[edit]Soybeans contain phytic acid, which may act as a chelating agent and inhibit mineral absorption, especially for diets already low in minerals.[207]
In culture
[edit]Although observations of soy consumption inducing gynecomastia on men[208] are not conclusive,[209] a pejorative term, "soy boy", has emerged to describe perceived emasculated young men with feminine traits.[210]
Futures
[edit]Soybean futures are traded on the Chicago Board of Trade and have delivery dates in January (F), March (H), May (K), July (N), August (Q), September (U), November (X).
They are also traded on other commodity futures exchanges under different contract specifications:
- SAFEX: The South African Futures Exchange[211]
- DC: Dalian Commodity Exchange[212]
- ODE: Osaka Dojima Commodity Exchange (formerly Kansai Commodities Exchange, KEX) in Japan[213]
- NCDEX: National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange, India.
- ROFEX: Rosario Grain Exchange in Argentina
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- da Silva, Claiton Marcio; de Majo, Claudio, eds. The Age of the Soybean: An Environmental History of Soy during the Great Acceleration (White Horse Press, 2022) online review
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- ^ "You can literally have 40% yield loss with no symptoms," says Greg Tylka, Iowa State University (ISU) Extension nematologist.
- ^ Reliance on the main genetic source of SCN resistance (PI 88788)may be helping SCN to overcome SCN-resistant varieties. Out of 807 resistant varieties listed by ISU this year, just 18 had a genetic background outside of PI 88788. "We have lots of varieties to pick from, but the genetic background is not as diverse as we would like it to be," says Tylka.
- ^ There have been cases where SCN has clipped yields of SCN-resistant varieties. Reliance on the main genetic source of SCN resistance (PI 88788)may be helping SCN to overcome SCN-resistant varieties.
Works cited
[edit]- Lim TK (2012). "Glycine max". Edible Medicinal and Non-Medicinal Plants. Dordrecht, NL: Springer. pp. 634–714. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-1764-0_79. ISBN 978-94-007-1763-3.
Soybean
View on GrokipediaBiological Characteristics
Etymology and Nomenclature
The English term "soybean" combines "soy," derived from the Japanese word shōyu (soy sauce), which entered European languages via Dutch soya in the 17th century, with "bean," an Old English term for leguminous seeds tracing to Proto-Germanic baunō.[13][14] The designation "soybean" first appeared in American literature in 1804, when botanist James Mease used it to describe the legume used in producing soy sauce, reflecting its introduction to the West through Asian fermented products rather than the plant itself.[15] The scientific binomial Glycine max (L.) Merr. designates the cultivated soybean, with the genus Glycine established by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 from the Greek glykys (sweet), originally applied to species with sweet-tasting roots, though not specifically for the soybean.[16] Linnaeus's initial classification placed early soybean-like plants under Dolichos soja, later recombined into Glycine.[17] By the late 19th century, botanists favored Glycine hispida (Moench) Maximowicz for the domesticated form, but in 1917, Elmer Drew Merrill standardized Glycine max to distinguish it from wild progenitor Glycine soja, a nomenclature accepted internationally thereafter.[17][18] Common names vary regionally: "soya bean" or "soya" predominates in British English and parts of Europe, while "soybean" is standard in North America; in East Asia, it is known as dàdòu (great bean) in Mandarin Chinese, emphasizing its historical significance as a staple legume domesticated around 3000 BCE.[19][20] Other terms include "edamame" for immature pods in Japanese contexts and occasional regional variants like "soja" from Dutch influences.[21] The International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants governs its formal usage, prioritizing Glycine max for cultivated varieties to avoid confusion with wild relatives.[18]Botanical Description
The soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) is an annual herbaceous legume in the family Fabaceae, characterized by an erect, bushy growth habit with branched stems that are often pubescent.[22][23] Plants typically reach heights of 0.2 to 1.5 meters, though some varieties extend to 2 meters under favorable conditions, supported by a deep taproot and extensive lateral roots spreading up to 2.5 meters horizontally in the upper soil layers.[23][24] Leaves are alternate and trifoliolate, comprising three oval to lanceolate leaflets measuring 3–10 cm in length, with a pubescent surface; unifoliate leaves appear first, followed by trifoliate stages in vegetative development.[23][25] Flowers are small, approximately 5–8 mm long, papilionaceous, and range from white to purple, borne in short axillary racemes that emerge 25–150 days after germination.[23][24] The fruit is a slightly curved, pubescent pod, 3–15 cm long, containing 2–5 oval or spherical seeds per pod at maturity; seeds exhibit varied coloration including yellow, green, brown, black, or mottled patterns, enclosed by a seed coat surrounding the embryo and cotyledons.[23][26] Growth habit varies between determinate types, where vegetative growth ceases at flowering, and indeterminate types, which continue branching during reproduction.[25]Growth and Development
Soybean (Glycine max) is an annual herbaceous legume that completes its life cycle in a single growing season, typically spanning 100 to 150 days from planting to physiological maturity depending on variety and environmental conditions.[25] The plant's development is divided into vegetative (V) and reproductive (R) phases, which overlap in indeterminate varieties where main stem growth continues after flowering begins, while determinate types cease terminal growth at flowering.[27] Vegetative growth initiates with germination, requiring soil temperatures of at least 10°C for emergence, and proceeds through stages defined by the number of trifoliate leaves on the main stem, from VE (emergence) to V1 (first trifoliate leaf) up to Vn (nth node).[28] [29] Reproductive development commences with R1 (beginning bloom, first flower at any node) and advances through R2 (full bloom, flowers open on two nodes), pod initiation (R3), pod elongation (R4), seed development (R5 to R6), and maturity (R7 to R8, when 95% of pods have reached mature color).[25] [27] These stages are critical for management decisions, as yield potential is established during early vegetative growth through node accumulation, with reproductive phases determining pod set and seed fill under assimilate competition.[29] Empirical field data indicate that the transition from vegetative to reproductive phases occurs after 4 to 6 weeks post-emergence in temperate regions, influenced by cumulative photoperiod and thermal time.[30] As a facultative short-day plant, soybean flowering is promoted by photoperiods shorter than 14 hours, with long days delaying reproductive onset by extending the vegetative phase, particularly in photoperiod-sensitive maturity groups (e.g., later groups III to VIII).[28] [31] Temperature modulates this response; optimal growth occurs between 20°C and 30°C, but temperatures above 30°C under long photoperiods further postpone flowering, while cardinal temperatures for germination range from a minimum of approximately 2°C to an optimum of 30°C and maximum of 40°C.[28] [32] Water availability during pod and seed fill stages critically affects development, with deficits reducing pod set by up to 50% in sensitive phases like R3 to R5, underscoring the interplay of environmental cues in realizing genetic yield potential.[33][34]Chemical Composition
Soybean seeds, on a dry weight basis, consist primarily of protein (approximately 36–46%), lipids (18–20%), and carbohydrates (30–35%), with the remainder comprising ash, fiber, and moisture.[35][36] The protein content typically averages around 40%, making soybeans a high-protein legume comparable to animal sources in amino acid profile, though deficient in sulfur-containing amino acids like methionine.[37] Lipids, mainly in the form of triglycerides, average 20% and are rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids, including linoleic (50–55%) and alpha-linolenic acids (7–10%).[36] Carbohydrates include oligosaccharides like raffinose and stachyose (4–5%), which contribute to flatulence upon consumption, and structural components such as cellulose and hemicellulose.[37]| Component | Approximate Content (% dry weight) | Primary Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | 36–46 | High in lysine, leucine; low in methionine[35] |
| Lipids | 18–20 | Predominantly unsaturated fats; source of omega-6 and omega-3[36] |
| Carbohydrates | 30–35 | Includes 4–5% oligosaccharides; low starch (1–2%)[37] |
| Fiber | 5–6 | Mostly insoluble; aids digestion[38] |
| Ash | 4–5 | Mineral content[38] |
Taxonomy and Evolutionary History
Classification and Relatives
The soybean, scientifically named Glycine max (L.) Merr., is classified in the kingdom Plantae, phylum Tracheophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Fabales, family Fabaceae, genus Glycine.[22] It belongs to the subfamily Faboideae and tribe Phaseoleae within Fabaceae.[26] The species epithet max reflects its larger size compared to wild relatives, while the binomial was formalized by Merrill in 1917 based on Linnaeus's earlier description under Arachis max.[47] Within the genus Glycine, which encompasses around 20 species, G. max is placed in the subgenus Soja alongside its closest wild relative, Glycine soja, an annual herbaceous plant native to East Asia.[26] The subgenus Soja is distinguished by its annual lifecycle and diploid chromosome number of 2n=40, contrasting with the primarily Australian perennial species in subgenus Glycine, which exhibit polyploidy (2n=78–80 or 114).[18] G. soja serves as the progenitor of cultivated soybean, sharing high genetic similarity and enabling interspecific hybridization for breeding purposes.[26] The tribe Phaseoleae, comprising over 80 genera and 500 species, includes other economically important legumes such as common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), mung bean (Vigna radiata), and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata), all sharing pantropical distributions and similar floral structures adapted for bee pollination.[26] These relatives highlight the tribe's role in global food production, with Glycine species differentiated by their indehiscent pods and suberect growth habit compared to the more vining forms in Phaseolus and Vigna.[48] Phylogenetic studies confirm Glycine as a distinct lineage within Phaseoleae, with subgenus Soja diverging early from the Australian perennials around 5–10 million years ago based on molecular clock estimates.[18]Genetic Diversity and Domestication
The cultivated soybean (Glycine max) was domesticated from its wild progenitor, Glycine soja, in East Asia approximately 6,000 to 9,000 years ago, with molecular and archaeological evidence pointing to a single domestication event originating from a cluster of wild populations in the Yangtze River Valley region of China.[49][50] Genetic analyses, including comparisons of nucleotide sequences and genome-wide SNPs, confirm that G. max and G. soja diverged prior to domestication but share a recent common ancestry, with sympatric distribution in East Asia facilitating the transition from wild to cultivated forms through human selection for traits such as non-shattering pods, larger seeds, and determinate growth habits.[51][52] Domestication imposed a severe genetic bottleneck on soybean populations, reducing nucleotide diversity in G. max by nearly half compared to G. soja, with an estimated 81% loss of rare alleles and a 60% shift in gene allele frequencies due to artificial selection favoring agronomically desirable variants.[53][54] This bottleneck effect is more pronounced than subsequent reductions from landrace formation or modern breeding, as evidenced by resequencing studies showing that wild G. soja retains higher overall genetic variation, including adaptive alleles for stress tolerance absent or diminished in cultivated lines.[55][1] Population genetic models indicate effective population sizes in G. max dropped to as low as 3,500–9,000 individuals during early domestication, contrasting with larger, more stable wild populations, which underscores the causal role of selective sweeps in eroding diversity while fixing domestication-related loci.[56] Contemporary genomic surveys, such as those of over 8,000 accessions, reveal structured patterns of diversity loss aligned with domestication and dispersal, with G. max exhibiting reduced heterozygosity and linkage disequilibrium extending over larger genomic regions than in G. soja.[57][58] Despite this erosion, wild relatives preserve a reservoir of untapped variation—estimated at up to twice the allelic richness of cultivated soybeans—which genetic studies attribute to the wild species' broader ecological adaptation and lack of intensive breeding pressures.[54][59] Efforts to introgress wild diversity into G. max have identified quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for yield and disease resistance, highlighting the causal linkage between historical bottlenecks and modern breeding challenges like vulnerability to novel pathogens.[60][54]Cultivation Practices
Environmental Requirements
Soybeans thrive in temperate to subtropical climates with hot summers and a frost-free growing period of 100 to 130 days, depending on variety maturity group. Optimal air temperatures for vegetative growth and pod filling range from 20 to 30°C, while soil temperatures at a 5 cm depth should exceed 15°C at planting to ensure germination within 5 to 10 days and minimize seedling stress.[61][62][63] Temperatures below 10°C inhibit root nodulation and nitrogen fixation, and exposure to frost at any stage can cause severe yield losses due to cellular damage in sensitive tissues.[26] Well-drained loamy soils with neutral to slightly acidic pH (6.0 to 7.0) support maximal nutrient uptake, particularly phosphorus and molybdenum essential for symbiotic nitrogen fixation.[64][63] Soybeans tolerate a range of soil textures but perform poorly in heavy clays prone to waterlogging, which promotes root rot, or sandy soils with low water-holding capacity that exacerbate drought stress.[64] Adequate soil organic matter enhances moisture retention and microbial activity, contributing to yields up to 3 tonnes per hectare under favorable conditions.[65] Water demand totals 400 to 700 mm over the growing season, with 65% utilized during reproductive phases from flowering to seed maturation, where deficits reduce pod set and seed weight.[65][62] As a short-day plant, soybeans exhibit photoperiod sensitivity, with flowering typically initiated under day lengths shorter than 14 hours; longer photoperiods delay maturity in sensitive varieties, necessitating photoperiod-neutral cultivars for high-latitude production.[25][66] Irrigation supplements rainfall in regions with seasonal deficits to maintain yields, as water stress during pod filling can decrease seed oil content by 10-20%.[65]Soil and Agronomic Management
Soybeans require well-drained soils with good aeration and water-holding capacity, such as loamy textures balancing sand, silt, and clay to support root development and prevent waterlogging.[67] Poorly drained heavy clay or excessively sandy soils reduce yields due to root restriction or nutrient leaching, respectively, necessitating artificial drainage or amendments in marginal areas.[67] [68] Optimal soil pH for soybeans ranges from 6.0 to 7.0, with peak nutrient availability—particularly phosphorus and molybdenum for nitrogen fixation—occurring between 6.3 and 6.5; levels below 6.0 limit yields by reducing availability of these elements, while pH above 7.0 may induce iron deficiency.[69] [70] Lime application is recommended when pH falls below 6.1-6.2, calibrated to soil buffer capacity and texture for precise neutralization of acidity.[71] [72] Agronomic management emphasizes conservation tillage, including no-till systems, which maintain soil organic matter, reduce erosion, and lower fuel costs, though they may require starter nitrogen (e.g., 20-40 lb/acre) to offset residue-induced mineralization delays and achieve yields comparable to conventional tillage.[73] [68] Crop rotation with non-legumes like corn disrupts disease and pest cycles, improves soil structure via diverse root systems, and boosts soybean yields by 5-10% over continuous cropping through enhanced microbial activity and reduced inoculum buildup.[74] [75] Fertilization prioritizes phosphorus and potassium based on soil tests, as soybeans fix 50-200 lb/acre of atmospheric nitrogen through Bradyrhizobium symbiosis—enhanced by seed inoculation in low-fertility or virgin soils—but remove substantial P (40-60 lb/acre) and K (60-80 lb/acre) at 50 bu/acre yields, depleting reserves without replenishment.[76] Micronutrients like sulfur or zinc may be needed in sandy or high-pH soils, but over-fertilization risks environmental runoff without proportional yield gains due to fixation efficiency limits.[76] Planting practices target final stands of 100,000-140,000 plants/acre, with seeding rates of 120,000-160,000 seeds/acre accounting for 10-20% germination losses, adjusted for early planting or poor soils; narrow row spacings of 7.5-15 inches promote rapid canopy closure, light interception, and 3-5 bu/acre yield advantages over 30-inch rows by minimizing weed competition and optimizing resource use.[77] [78] Seed depth should be 1-1.75 inches in tilled soils or up to 2 inches under no-till with adequate moisture to ensure uniform emergence without crusting risks.[79] Irrigation supplies 20-26 inches of seasonal water, with 60% used during reproductive stages (R1-R5) when deficits reduce pod set and seed fill; vegetative growth tolerates drier conditions (0.7 inches/week), but flowering demands 1.4 inches/week to avoid stress-induced abortion, guided by soil moisture monitoring to 12-24 inches depth.[80] [81] In rainfed systems, well-drained soils retain profile water for 70% uptake in the top 12 inches, but supplemental deficit irrigation in pod development sustains yields under variable precipitation.[82] Harvest timing targets 13-15% seed moisture to balance combine efficiency, minimize shattering losses (up to 5% per day delay), and avoid excess drying; draper headers enable earlier cutting of tougher stems, while post-harvest storage requires aeration to prevent mold at >13% moisture.[83] [84] Delays from weather or prior crop harvest can exacerbate pod drop, underscoring the causal link between timely agronomic decisions and final bushel recovery.[85]Varieties and Breeding Advances
Soybean (Glycine max) varieties are classified primarily by maturity groups (MGs), which range from 000 to X and reflect adaptations to photoperiod and latitude, influencing vegetative growth duration before flowering and reproductive development.[86] Group 000 varieties suit northern latitudes with short growing seasons, while group X adapts to tropical regions with extended seasons; within a region, longer-maturity varieties often yield higher due to extended photosynthesis but require precise planting timing to avoid frost risks.[87][88] Varieties are also distinguished by end-use: commodity oilseed types dominate global production for meal and oil extraction, comprising over 99% of U.S. acreage, while specialty vegetable types, such as edamame, feature larger seeds, higher sugar content when immature, and clear hila for food applications like fresh pods or processed products.[89][90] Conventional breeding efforts, initiated systematically in the U.S. by the USDA around 1902 with variety introductions starting in 1898 and testing from 1879, have emphasized yield gains, environmental adaptation, and quality traits through selection and hybridization.[91] By the 1920s, over 1,000 varieties had been introduced, enabling adaptation to diverse U.S. regions; average yields rose from approximately 20 bushels per acre in the early 1940s to over 50 bushels per acre by the 2020s via recurrent selection for pod number, seed size, and lodging resistance.[91][92] Disease resistance breeding has integrated major genes and quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for pathogens like soybean cyst nematode (first resistant variety released in 1960s), Phytophthora root rot, and Asian soybean rust, with over 28 diseases targeted globally through marker-assisted selection since the 1990s.[93][94] Recent advances include gene pyramiding to stack multiple resistance alleles, enhancing durability against evolving races, as in varieties combining Rpp genes for rust tolerance that sustain yields under high disease pressure.[95] Examples include conventional lines like S17-2193, registered in 2025 for high yield (up to 10% above checks) and resistances to charcoal rot, frogeye leaf spot, and stem canker without transgenic traits.[96] Breeding for abiotic stresses, such as drought and heat, has incorporated wild soybean (Glycine soja) germplasm since the 1980s, broadening genetic diversity for resilience in variable climates.[97]Global Production and Recent Trends
In 2024/2025, global soybean production reached an estimated 424.2 million metric tons, with Brazil leading at 169 million metric tons (40% of total), followed by the United States at 118.84 million metric tons (28%) and Argentina at 50.9 million metric tons (12%).[5] China produced approximately 20 million metric tons, primarily for domestic consumption, while India contributed around 12 million metric tons, focusing on regional needs.[98] Paraguay and other South American nations accounted for the remainder, benefiting from favorable subtropical climates and expanding acreage.[5]| Country | Production (million metric tons, 2024/2025) | Share of Global Total |
|---|---|---|
| Brazil | 169 | 40% |
| United States | 118.84 | 28% |
| Argentina | 50.9 | 12% |
| China | ~20 | ~5% |
| India | ~12 | ~3% |
Pests, Diseases, and Management
Soybean production is challenged by a range of insect pests, nematodes, and diseases that can cause yield reductions of 10-40% or more in affected fields, depending on environmental conditions and management practices.[105][106] Major insect pests include stink bugs (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae), which feed on pods and seeds, leading to shriveled kernels and transmission of yeast-spot disease; bean leaf beetles (Cerotoma trifurcata), which defoliate plants and damage pods; and corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea), also known as soybean podworm, which bores into buds, pods, and seeds during reproductive stages.[107][108] Soybean aphids (Aphis glycines) are a key pest in northern regions, causing direct feeding damage and honeydew production that promotes sooty mold, with outbreaks linked to yield losses exceeding 20 bushels per acre in severe cases.[109] Spider mites (Tetranychus spp.) thrive in hot, dry conditions, stippling leaves and reducing photosynthesis.[110] Nematodes, particularly the soybean cyst nematode (Heterodera glycines), represent a persistent underground threat, forming cysts on roots that impair nutrient and water uptake, resulting in stunted plants and chlorosis; this pathogen affects over 80% of U.S. soybean fields and can reduce yields by 30-50% without intervention.[106] Fungal diseases dominate foliar and root issues, with Asian soybean rust (Phakopsora pachyrhizi) causing rapid defoliation and potential total crop loss in humid environments; first detected in the U.S. in 2004, it necessitates fungicide applications timed to growth stages R1-R5.[23] [105] Other prevalent diseases include sudden death syndrome (Fusarium virguliforme), leading to root rot and foliar chlorosis; charcoal rot (Macrophomina phaseolina) in drought-stressed soils; and frogeye leaf spot (Cercospora sojina), which progresses to premature defoliation.[111] [112] Bacterial pathogens like Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. glycines cause pustule lesions, while viruses such as bean pod mottle virus spread via beetles, reducing seed quality.[113] Effective management relies on integrated pest management (IPM) principles, emphasizing scouting to determine economic thresholds—such as 250 aphids per plant for insecticide application—and cultural practices like crop rotation with non-hosts (e.g., corn or wheat) to disrupt pathogen cycles.[114] [115] Resistant varieties are critical; for instance, SCN-resistant cultivars with specific resistance genes (e.g., PI 88788 sources) limit nematode reproduction, though virulence shifts necessitate rotation of resistance types.[106] Fungicides like triazoles or strobilurins are applied preventatively for rust in high-risk areas, with aerial applications common in Brazil where the disease emerged in 2001.[116] Tillage and drainage improve control of soilborne issues like Sclerotinia sclerotiorum (white mold), while avoiding narrow-row planting reduces humidity-favoring conditions.[117] Biological controls, including predatory insects for aphids, supplement chemical options, with insecticides targeted at pod-feeding pests exceeding 1-2 per sweep net sample during R3-R5.[107] Early-season scouting for defoliators like velvetbean caterpillar or soybean looper prevents escalation, as these can consume up to 20% foliage without yield impact below thresholds.[118] Overall, combining host resistance, timely interventions, and field sanitation minimizes reliance on pesticides while sustaining yields.[119]Historical Development
Origins in East Asia
The wild ancestor of the cultivated soybean (Glycine max), known as Glycine soja, is native to East Asia, with its natural range spanning eastern China, Korea, Japan, and parts of Russia and Taiwan.[1] Genetic analyses indicate that G. max diverged from G. soja approximately 0.27 to 0.8 million years ago, with domestication occurring from this progenitor in a single primary event around 6000 to 9000 years before present (BP).[1] The most probable domestication center lies in the Huang-Huai Valley of central China, between the Yellow and Huai Rivers, where high genetic diversity and patterns of gene flow support this origin.[1] Archaeological evidence reveals early human association with soybeans in northern China dating to 9000–8600 calibrated years BP at sites like Jiahu in Henan province, where charred remains of small-seeded soybeans (averaging 3.1 by 2.2 mm) suggest initial cultivation or management of wild forms alongside millet-based agriculture.[120] These early specimens exhibit characteristics typical of G. soja, such as small size and pod shattering, indicating proto-domestication rather than full selective breeding.[120] By the Houli culture period around 7500 BP in the Yellow River valley (e.g., Yuezhuang site), evidence from X-ray tomography of seeds shows elevated oil content compared to modern wild soybeans, pointing to early human selection for nutritional traits even before marked increases in seed size.[121] Larger seeds and reduced shattering—key domestication traits controlled by genes like SHAT1-5—emerged later, around 4000 BP during the Longshan culture and accelerating by 3500 BP in the Shang period, reflecting a protracted domestication process exceeding 3500 years.[1][121] In Japan, small-seeded soybeans appear by 7000 cal BP at Initial Jōmon sites like Shimoyakebe, with larger domesticated forms confirmed by 5000 cal BP via direct accelerator mass spectrometry dating of charred seeds.[120] Korean sites, such as Pyeonggeodong (4840–4650 cal BP), yield similar early small seeds transitioning to larger ones (3.8–9.9 mm) by 3000 BP in the Mumun period.[120] While these findings indicate widespread early adoption across East Asia, genetic resequencing supports a central Chinese origin with subsequent dispersal, rather than independent domestications, as cultivated soybeans exhibit a single haplotype for non-shattering alleles fixed across varieties.[1] This pattern underscores gene flow from wild populations but a bottleneck in diversity during initial domestication in China.[1]Spread to Other Regions
Soybeans, domesticated in northeastern China around 1100 BC, gradually spread southward within China by the first century AD, reaching central and southern regions alongside Korea and Japan.[122] Cultivation in Japan commenced by the first century AD, with archaeological evidence of small-seeded varieties dating to approximately 7000 calibrated years before present in some sites, though widespread adoption followed introductions via Korea around 2000 years ago.[123][120] Over subsequent centuries, the crop extended to Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Thailand, facilitated by trade and migration, with expanded uses documented by the Song Dynasty (960–1279 AD) and further dissemination by the 16th century.[124][2] Introduction to Europe occurred in the 19th century through botanists and traders, with official presentation of Japanese and Chinese varieties at the 1873 Vienna World Exposition marking a key milestone for experimental cultivation.[125] Limited early trials preceded this, but systematic adoption lagged until the 20th century due to climatic challenges and unfamiliarity with processing. In the United States, initial references appeared in 1804 literature, but viable introductions began with seeds from the Perry Expedition to Japan in 1853–1854, followed by USDA imports of approximately 3,000 samples from Japan, China, Korea, and Manchuria between 1898 and 1928.[126][127][128] These efforts transitioned soybeans from ornamental or minor forage use to broader agronomic trials, setting the stage for later expansion. Early African introductions, such as to northern Nigeria in 1928, represented isolated efforts amid colonial agricultural experiments.[127]Industrialization and Modern Expansion
The industrialization of soybeans in the United States began in earnest during the early 20th century, as breeders developed varieties suited to Midwestern climates from Asian imports, enabling commercial-scale cultivation. By the 1920s, the establishment of oil extraction mills transformed soybeans into a dual-purpose crop, yielding oil for industrial applications such as paints and varnishes alongside protein-rich meal for animal feed.[123][126] This shift was propelled by technological innovations like solvent extraction processes introduced in the 1930s, which improved efficiency in separating oil from meal, peaking industrial soy oil uses between 1930 and 1942 before wartime priorities redirected output toward edible oils.[129] Post-World War II, surging demand for livestock feed amid rising meat consumption catalyzed explosive growth, with U.S. production dominating over 75% of global output from the 1950s through the 1970s, supported by mechanized farming and expanded acreage.[126][130] The United States emerged as the world's leading soybean exporter by the 1950s, exporting primarily to Europe and Asia, though this hegemony eroded as production costs and policy shifts influenced competitiveness.[130] Modern expansion has centered on South America, where Brazil and Argentina capitalized on vast arable lands and subtropical climates to quadruple global soybean output since 1980, with over 70% of post-2000 growth occurring in the region.[131] Brazil overtook the U.S. as the top producer in the early 2010s, reaching 169 million metric tons in 2024/2025—40% of global production—driven by continuous acreage increases for 18 years and exports dominated by demand from China, which imports about 70% of Brazilian soybeans.[5][132] Argentina follows as a key player, with combined South American output underscoring a geographic shift from North American dominance, facilitated by genetically modified seeds introduced in 1996 that enhanced yield resilience and enabled cultivation on previously underutilized frontiers.[133][131] Global production now exceeds 350 million metric tons annually, reflecting soybeans' role as a cornerstone commodity in feed, oil, and biofuel markets.[134]Genetics and Biotechnology
Natural Genetics
The cultivated soybean, Glycine max (L.) Merr., is a diploid species with a chromosome number of 2n=40, organized into 20 pairs, and possesses a palaeopolyploid genome resulting from an ancient whole-genome duplication event approximately 13 million years ago, which contributed to gene family expansions underlying traits like seed oil content.[135] Its assembled genome size is approximately 950 megabases (Mb) for the reference cultivar Williams 82, though estimates range up to 1,115 Mb including repetitive elements that comprise over 50% of the sequence.[135] [136] This genomic architecture features extensive synteny with related legumes but includes segmental duplications that influence allelic diversity and adaptation. G. max evolved from its wild progenitor Glycine soja Sieb. & Zucc., a close relative native to East Asia, through domestication around 5,000 years ago in the temperate regions of what is now China, with genetic evidence supporting a single domestication origin followed by a moderate population bottleneck that reduced nucleotide diversity in cultivated lines to about 25-30% of wild levels.[54] [1] Microsatellite and nucleotide analyses confirm G. soja as the direct ancestor, sharing a common gene pool that allows fertile hybridization, though cultivated soybeans exhibit reduced heterozygosity due to selective sweeps at loci controlling key domestication traits such as pod shattering resistance (sh genes), determinate growth habit, and larger seed size.[137] Wild G. soja maintains higher genetic diversity, particularly in stress-adaptive alleles for abiotic tolerances like salinity and drought, which have been partially lost in G. max but remain accessible via introgression.[138] As a predominantly autogamous species, soybean relies on self-pollination, with cleistogamous flowers that rarely open, resulting in outcrossing rates typically below 1% but up to 3.4% under certain environmental conditions favoring insect visitation.[58] This breeding system promotes homozygosity and genetic stability but limits natural gene flow, contributing to population structuring in wild accessions differentiated by geography and ecotype. Natural variation in G. soja includes alleles for photoperiod sensitivity mediated by E loci (e.g., E1 to E4), which govern flowering time and latitudinal adaptation, while G. max landraces show fixation of derived alleles favoring longer vegetative phases in temperate zones. Deleterious mutation loads decreased by about 7.1% during domestication, reflecting purifying selection, though some persist due to the selfing nature reducing efficacy of recombination-based purging.[56] Overall, the natural genetic framework of soybean underscores a tension between the adaptive robustness of wild diversity and the canalized uniformity selected in cultivation.Conventional Breeding
Conventional breeding of soybeans relies on controlled crosses between selected parent lines exhibiting desirable traits, followed by multi-generational selection within progeny populations to stabilize and enhance those characteristics, excluding recombinant DNA or gene editing technologies. Primary methods encompass the pedigree approach, which maintains detailed records of ancestry to facilitate targeted selection for traits like yield or maturity; the bulk method, involving mass propagation of populations with delayed individual selection to manage large numbers efficiently; and early generation testing, which accelerates evaluation of traits in F2 or F3 generations for quicker adaptation to specific environments. Mass and pure-line selection have also been employed historically for initial trait fixation in diverse germplasm.[139][140] Systematic efforts in the United States commenced in the 1920s, building on earlier introductions of Asian landraces, with key expeditions such as the 1929–1931 Dorsett-Morse mission collecting over 4,500 varieties from East Asia to enrich the genetic pool. By the 1930s, public breeding programs at institutions like the USDA's Regional Soybean Laboratory emphasized selection for agronomic traits, leading to the release of early cultivars adapted to North American conditions. Post-1940s hybridization efforts yielded approximately 25% yield gains by the 1980s, while the 1949 establishment of a comprehensive USDA germplasm collection and the 1970 Plant Variety Protection Act further supported proprietary and public variety development. These initiatives broadened the genetic base, as recommended by the National Academy of Sciences in 1972, to counter narrowing diversity in elite lines.[91][141] Achievements include steady genetic yield gains, with U.S. soybean seed yields increasing through breeding-driven improvements in seed number, canopy architecture, and physiological efficiency, though at rates lower than corn (typically 1–1.5% annually in recent decades). For disease resistance, conventional methods have successfully introgressed major R genes and QTLs; examples include rhg1 (chromosome 18, copy number variants) and Rhg4 (chromosome 8) from sources like PI 88788 and Peking for soybean cyst nematode (SCN) resistance against races 1–5, incorporated into cultivars such as Forrest and Hartwig. Over 40 Rps alleles (e.g., Rps1a–1k, Rps3a, Rps11 on chromosomes 3, 13, 18) confer resistance to Phytophthora root and stem rot, with Rps11 effective against 80% of U.S. Phytophthora sojae isolates. QTLs like qRmi10-01 (chromosome 10) provide resistance to southern root-knot nematode, explaining up to 31% phenotypic variation from PI 96354. Recent releases, such as 'S17-2193' (2025), combine high yield with SCN and frogeye leaf spot resistance alongside 23% seed oil content.[142][93][143][96] Despite successes, conventional breeding faces limitations in rapidly stacking polygenic traits or overcoming linkage drag, as evidenced by challenges in enhancing photosynthetic efficiency, where traditional selection yields minimal gains compared to potential genomic-assisted approaches. Nonetheless, it remains foundational for developing regionally adapted, non-transgenic varieties, particularly in public programs targeting organic systems or specific resistances, with ongoing efforts in regions like Ontario and Missouri focusing on yield, digestibility, and multi-disease tolerance.[144][145][146]Genetic Modification and Gene Editing
Genetically modified soybeans were first commercialized in 1996 with the introduction of Monsanto's Roundup Ready variety, engineered for tolerance to the herbicide glyphosate via the insertion of the cp4 epsps gene from Agrobacterium species.[147] This followed regulatory approval in 1995 and built on earlier laboratory successes, such as the first transgenic soybean plants produced in 1988 through particle bombardment.[148] The primary aim was to enable post-emergence weed control without crop damage, simplifying farm management and reducing tillage.[149] Subsequent developments included stacked traits combining herbicide tolerance with insect resistance, such as Bt proteins targeting lepidopteran pests, approved in varieties like those from Pioneer Hi-Bred in the early 2000s.[150] By 2023, adoption rates exceeded 94% in the United States and reached 99% in Brazil, the top two producers, reflecting farmer preferences for these traits amid expanding cultivation areas.[151] [152] Globally, herbicide-tolerant soybeans dominate GM plantings, comprising over 90% of GM soybean acreage, though yield gains from these traits are often attributed to improved weed management rather than direct genetic enhancements in productivity.[153] Agronomic impacts include initial reductions in insecticide use for Bt varieties and shifts in herbicide profiles, with meta-analyses indicating a 7.2% global decrease in pesticide volume from GM crops between 1996 and 2020, though soybean-specific herbicide applications have risen over time due to glyphosate-resistant weeds.[154] [155] Environmental concerns center on biodiversity effects from monoculture expansion and herbicide resistance, prompting innovations like dicamba-tolerant varieties introduced in 2016, yet empirical data show no consistent yield penalty compared to non-GM counterparts under optimal conditions.[156] Gene editing technologies, particularly CRISPR/Cas9, have advanced soybean improvement since the mid-2010s, enabling precise modifications without foreign DNA integration, such as knocking out raffinose synthase genes to reduce flatulence-causing oligosaccharides or editing GmARM for Phytophthora root rot resistance.[157] [158] Protocols for multiplex editing target multiple loci simultaneously, enhancing traits like shoot architecture and stress tolerance, with edited plants achieving heritable mutations at efficiencies up to 20-30% in stable lines.[159] Commercial deployment remains limited as of 2025, pending regulatory approvals, but tools like PAM-less SpRY variants expand editable sites, potentially accelerating non-transgenic variety development.[160] Scientific consensus from bodies like the National Academy of Sciences and WHO holds that approved GM soybeans pose no unique health risks beyond conventional crops, based on compositional equivalence and long-term feeding studies showing no adverse effects.[161] [162] Dissenting views, often from independent researchers, highlight potential understudied long-term ecological cascades or allergenicity gaps, though these lack empirical substantiation in peer-reviewed meta-analyses.[163] Regulatory frameworks in major producers emphasize case-by-case risk assessment, balancing innovation with monitoring for resistance evolution.[164]Uses and Applications
Animal Feed and Meal
Soybean meal, the defatted residue after oil extraction from soybeans, constitutes the primary form in which soybeans are used for animal feed, providing a high-protein ingredient essential for livestock and aquaculture nutrition. Globally, approximately 75-80% of soybean production is directed toward animal feed via meal, with the remainder split between oil for food and industrial uses.[165] In the United States, soybean meal accounts for about 30% of total soybean output allocated to livestock feed.[165] Processing begins with cleaning and cracking the soybeans, followed by heating to 60-70°C to inactivate anti-nutritional factors such as trypsin inhibitors and lectins, which can impair protein digestion if untreated. Most commercial meal is produced via solvent extraction using hexane to remove 18-20% of the bean's oil, yielding meal with 44-48% crude protein on a dry basis; mechanical expeller pressing retains more oil (5-6%) but results in lower protein concentration around 43-44%.[166] This heat-treated meal is highly digestible, with amino acid profiles rich in lysine (essential for monogastric animals) and methionine, often requiring minimal supplementation compared to other plant proteins.[167] [168] In poultry diets, soybean meal comprises 20-30% of rations, supporting efficient growth due to its balanced protein and energy content; U.S. poultry consumes about 66% of domestic soybean meal, totaling 23 million short tons annually. Swine rations typically include 15-25% meal, with U.S. usage at 6 million short tons per year, leveraging its superior lysine bioavailability over corn-soy blends. Dairy and beef cattle utilize lower proportions (10-20% in supplements), focusing on rumen-degradable protein for microbial fermentation, with U.S. dairy at 6 million short tons and beef at 1 million short tons. Aquaculture and pet food represent smaller shares, around 0.2 and 0.9 million short tons respectively in the U.S.[169] [170] Overall, poultry and swine account for 78% of U.S. soybean meal fed to animals.[171] Soybean meal's dominance stems from its cost-effectiveness and nutritional efficiency, though variations in bean quality and processing can affect urease activity (a marker for adequate heat treatment, ideally 0.2-0.3 units) and protein solubility, influencing feed performance across species.[172]Industrial Products
Soybean oil, extracted from soybeans via crushing and solvent extraction, constitutes a primary feedstock for industrial applications, with the United States utilizing approximately 9.6% of its soybean oil production for non-food and non-feed purposes such as paints, plastics, and chemicals.[173] This oil's fatty acid composition, including high levels of polyunsaturated fats, enables its conversion into drying oils for coatings and resins.[174] A significant industrial derivative is biodiesel, produced through transesterification of soybean oil with methanol, yielding fatty acid methyl esters (FAME). In the United States, soybean oil remains the dominant biodiesel feedstock, comprising over 50% of production inputs; for instance, it accounted for 744 million pounds of consumption in December 2020 alone, supporting annual outputs exceeding 1.8 billion gallons by marketing year 2017-2018.[175][176] Recent projections indicate soybean oil use in biofuels reaching 13.1 billion pounds for the 2024-2025 marketing year, driven by renewable diesel demand and policy incentives like the Renewable Fuel Standard.[177] One bushel of soybeans yields about 1.5 gallons of biodiesel alongside protein meal.[178] Beyond fuels, soybean oil functions as a base for alkyd resins in paints and varnishes, printing inks, and oleochemicals, where its viscosity and oxidative stability provide eco-friendly alternatives to petroleum derivatives.[174][179] Soy protein isolates and concentrates from defatted meal are employed in wood adhesives, paper coatings, and biodegradable plastics, offering water resistance and binding properties superior to some synthetic options in niche applications.[174][180] Soy lecithin, a phospholipid byproduct separated during oil refining, serves as an emulsifier, dispersant, and wetting agent in industrial sectors including paints, leather processing, textiles, and agrochemicals, enhancing product stability and reducing viscosity without petroleum reliance.[181][182] These applications underscore soybeans' role in sustainable manufacturing, though scalability depends on oil yield variations (typically 18-20% by weight) and competition from food markets.[4]Human Food Products
Soybeans are processed into a variety of foods for direct human consumption, representing approximately 7% of global production, with the remainder primarily directed toward animal feed and industrial uses.[134] These products originated largely in East Asian culinary traditions and include both unfermented and fermented forms, valued for their protein content and versatility.[183] Modern adaptations have expanded their use in meat analogs, flours, and beverages worldwide.[184] Unfermented soy foods emphasize minimal processing to retain the bean's natural composition. Edamame consists of immature green soybeans harvested before full maturity, typically boiled or steamed in the pod and seasoned with salt; it serves as a snack or side dish, particularly in Japanese cuisine.[183] Tofu, or bean curd, is produced by grinding soybeans into a milk-like emulsion, heating it, and coagulating the proteins with agents such as calcium sulfate or magnesium chloride (nigari), followed by pressing into blocks; varieties range from silken (soft, for soups) to firm (for grilling or stir-frying).[185] Soy milk is made by soaking, grinding, and filtering soybeans in water, often fortified with vitamins and minerals in commercial versions for use as a dairy alternative in beverages, cereals, or yogurt production.[184] Other unfermented items include roasted soy nuts for snacking and soy flour, obtained by milling defatted soybeans, which is incorporated into baked goods to boost protein without altering flavor significantly.[186] Fermented soy products undergo microbial transformation, enhancing digestibility and flavor through processes involving fungi, bacteria, or yeast. Tempeh, originating from Indonesia, involves cooking whole soybeans and inoculating them with Rhizopus oligosporus mold, which binds the beans into a firm cake fermented for 24-48 hours at around 30°C (86°F); it is sliced, fried, or grilled as a protein-rich meat substitute.[185] Miso, a Japanese staple, is a paste created by fermenting steamed soybeans with koji (Aspergillus oryzae mold on rice or barley) and salt for months to years, used in soups, marinades, and dressings for its umami depth.[187] Natto, a Japanese breakfast food, results from soybeans fermented with Bacillus subtilis bacteria for about 24 hours, producing a sticky, stringy texture with strong ammonia-like aroma; it is consumed over rice for its probiotic properties.[187] Soy sauce is brewed from soybeans, roasted wheat, salt, and water via koji fermentation followed by brine aging for 6-12 months or longer, yielding a liquid condiment essential in East Asian cooking; traditional methods contrast with chemical hydrolysis in some mass-produced variants.[188][189] In contemporary applications, soybeans feature in textured vegetable protein (TVP), an extruded defatted soy flour rehydrated for use in vegetarian burgers or chili, and soy-based meat alternatives that mimic animal textures through high-moisture extrusion.[190] These products leverage soy's complete amino acid profile, though processing levels affect nutrient bioavailability compared to traditional whole-bean preparations.[191]Nutritional Profile
Macronutrients
Dry soybeans contain approximately 36.5 grams of protein, 19.9 grams of total fat, and 30.2 grams of carbohydrates per 100 grams, with 9.3 grams of the carbohydrates consisting of dietary fiber, on a raw mature seed basis.[192] These macronutrients contribute to a caloric density of 446 kcal per 100 grams, with water comprising about 8.5 grams.[192] The protein fraction is notable for its completeness, providing all nine essential amino acids in proportions suitable for human nutrition, though processing can affect digestibility.[193] Soybean protein exhibits high nutritional quality, with protein digestibility-corrected amino acid score (PDCAAS) values often approaching or equaling 1.0 for refined forms like isolates, indicating equivalence to animal proteins such as casein or egg in meeting amino acid requirements when adjusted for digestibility.[194] Whole soybeans score slightly lower, around 0.85-0.90 on average across products due to antinutritional factors like trypsin inhibitors that reduce protein utilization unless heat-processed, but they remain superior to most plant proteins in essential amino acid content, particularly lysine and methionine.[193] The fat content is predominantly polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), comprising about 58% of total lipids, with linoleic acid (an omega-6 fatty acid) accounting for roughly 50% of the oil and alpha-linolenic acid (an omega-3) around 8%.[195] Saturated fats represent 12-15%, and monounsaturated fats 22-30%, making soybean oil a source of essential fatty acids but with a high omega-6 to omega-3 ratio that exceeds dietary recommendations for balance in some analyses.[196] Carbohydrates in soybeans are largely non-digestible, including structural polysaccharides and soluble oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose from the raffinose family, which constitute 4-5% of dry weight and contribute to flatulence in consumers due to fermentation by gut microbiota.[197] Sucrose is the primary digestible sugar, while the high fiber content supports gut health but limits net carbohydrate availability to about 21 grams per 100 grams after subtracting fiber.[192] These components underscore soybeans' role as a low-glycemic, fiber-rich staple despite modest total carbohydrate levels.[197]Micronutrients and Bioactive Compounds
Soybeans provide a range of micronutrients, including several B vitamins and essential minerals, though concentrations vary by cultivar, growing conditions, and processing methods such as boiling or fermentation, which can reduce water-soluble vitamins like folate by up to 20-30%.[198] Key vitamins include folate (vitamin B9), which supports DNA synthesis and red blood cell formation; vitamin K1 (phylloquinone), involved in blood clotting; and thiamine (vitamin B1), essential for energy metabolism. Minerals present include iron for oxygen transport, magnesium for enzymatic reactions, phosphorus for bone health, potassium for electrolyte balance, zinc for immune function, copper for connective tissue formation, and manganese for antioxidant defense.[191] The following table summarizes approximate micronutrient content in mature soybeans, boiled without salt, per 100 grams, based on USDA-derived data:| Nutrient | Amount per 100g | % Daily Value* |
|---|---|---|
| Iron | 5.1 mg | 28% |
| Calcium | 102 mg | 8% |
| Magnesium | 86 mg | 20% |
| Phosphorus | 245 mg | 20% |
| Potassium | 515 mg | 11% |
| Zinc | 2.0 mg | 18% |
| Copper | 0.41 mg | 46% |
| Manganese | 1.0 mg | 43% |
| Folate | 54 µg | 14% |
| Vitamin K | 19.2 µg | 16% |
| Thiamine | 0.16 mg | 13% |
Comparison to Other Staples
Soybeans exhibit a more balanced macronutrient profile than typical cereal staples such as wheat, rice, and maize, which are predominantly carbohydrate sources with limited protein and fat. Per 100 grams of raw mature seeds, soybeans contain approximately 446 kcal, 36.5 g protein, 19.9 g fat, and 30.2 g carbohydrates (including 9.3 g fiber), whereas wheat provides 339 kcal, 13.2 g protein, 2.5 g fat, and 71.2 g carbohydrates (12.2 g fiber); white rice offers 365 kcal, 7.1 g protein, 0.7 g fat, and 80 g carbohydrates (1.3 g fiber); and maize yields 365 kcal, 9.4 g protein, 4.7 g fat, and 74.3 g carbohydrates (7.3 g fiber).[205] Potatoes, consumed fresh with high water content, contrast sharply at 77 kcal, 2.0 g protein, 0.1 g fat, and 17.5 g carbohydrates (2.2 g fiber) per 100 grams.[205]| Nutrient (per 100 g raw) | Soybeans | Wheat | White Rice | Maize | Potato (fresh) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy (kcal) | 446 | 339 | 365 | 365 | 77 |
| Protein (g) | 36.5 | 13.2 | 7.1 | 9.4 | 2.0 |
| Total Fat (g) | 19.9 | 2.5 | 0.7 | 4.7 | 0.1 |
| Carbohydrates (g) | 30.2 | 71.2 | 80.0 | 74.3 | 17.5 |
| Dietary Fiber (g) | 9.3 | 12.2 | 1.3 | 7.3 | 2.2 |
Health Effects
Evidence-Based Benefits
Soybean protein is a high-quality complete protein source, providing all essential amino acids in proportions suitable for human needs, with a protein digestibility-corrected amino acid score (PDCAAS) typically ranging from 0.90 to 1.00, comparable to many animal proteins.[193] This makes soybeans particularly valuable in plant-based diets for supporting muscle maintenance and growth, as evidenced by studies showing effective nitrogen retention and utilization in adults consuming soy isolates.[209] Consumption of soy protein, at doses of approximately 25 grams per day as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, has been associated with modest reductions in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels, typically by 3-4%, according to a meta-analysis of 46 randomized controlled trials identified by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).[210] The FDA authorized a health claim in 1999 stating that such intake may reduce the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), supported by cumulative meta-analyses confirming a consistent, though small, LDL-lowering effect over time.[211] [212] Soy isoflavones, bioactive compounds in soybeans, contribute to cardiovascular benefits by improving arterial stiffness and modestly lowering systolic blood pressure, as shown in systematic reviews of randomized trials.[213] [214] For postmenopausal women, soy isoflavone supplementation or soy food intake has demonstrated efficacy in alleviating vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes, with meta-analyses indicating reductions in frequency and severity, particularly during perimenopause, without significant estrogenic effects on breast tissue or endometrium.[215] [216] Whole soy foods, including soybeans and derivatives like tofu, appear more effective than isolated isoflavones for these symptom-relieving outcomes in clinical trials.[217] Observational data further link higher soy intake to lower risks of type 2 diabetes and overall cardiovascular disease, though causal evidence from intervention studies emphasizes the role of soy's fiber, protein, and polyunsaturated fats alongside isoflavones.[218]Potential Adverse Effects
Soybean allergy affects approximately 0.4% of children and 0.3% of the general population based on clinical challenges, manifesting as symptoms including hives, gastrointestinal distress, respiratory issues, and in severe cases, anaphylaxis.[219][220] This prevalence is higher in pediatric populations, where soy ranks among the top eight food allergens, though many children outgrow it.[219] Phytoestrogens in soybeans, primarily isoflavones, have raised concerns for endocrine disruption, particularly regarding testosterone levels in men and estrogen-sensitive conditions. However, meta-analyses of clinical trials, including 38 studies on males, demonstrate no significant effects on total testosterone, free testosterone, estradiol, or estrone levels from soy protein or isoflavone intake, irrespective of dose or duration.[221][222] Similarly, in postmenopausal women, soy isoflavones show no impact on estrogenicity measures such as endometrial thickness or vaginal cytology.[223] Soy contains goitrogens that can inhibit iodine uptake by the thyroid, potentially exacerbating hypothyroidism in iodine-deficient individuals or those consuming large amounts of unprocessed soy. A meta-analysis of randomized trials found soy supplementation modestly elevates thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels without altering free thyroxine or triiodothyronine, though effects are minimal in iodine-replete populations.[224] Observational data link high soy intake to elevated TSH in women, but processing methods like fermentation or heating reduce goitrogenic activity, mitigating risks in traditional soy foods.[225][226] Anti-nutritional factors such as trypsin inhibitors, lectins, phytates, saponins, and oligosaccharides in raw or minimally processed soybeans impair protein digestion, enzyme activity, and mineral bioavailability (e.g., iron, zinc, calcium). These effects contribute to reduced nutrient absorption and gastrointestinal discomfort like bloating from oligosaccharides, though heat treatment during processing deactivates most inhibitors, rendering traditional soy products like tofu or tempeh safer.[227][228] In typical soy foods like tofu, tempeh, or edamame, processing (fermentation, cooking) substantially reduces or inactivates these compounds; recent reviews find no meaningful negative health alterations from moderate consumption, with minor effects on mineral absorption in balanced diets and no significant risks to digestion, cognition, fertility, or other systems in men or general populations.[229][230] Alkaline processing can form lysinoalanine, linked to kidney damage in animal studies, but human exposure is low in standard food preparation.[227] Soy foods contain oxalates, which may increase urinary oxalate excretion and promote calcium oxalate kidney stone formation in susceptible individuals, as evidenced by studies showing elevated oxalate absorption post-soy consumption. However, soy's phytate content can bind calcium and inhibit stone crystallization, offering a counterbalancing effect; recommendations limit intake to under 50 mg oxalate daily for stone formers.[231][232][233]Debunking Common Myths
A persistent claim holds that soy phytoestrogens, known as isoflavones, feminize men by lowering testosterone levels or increasing estrogen, potentially leading to reduced muscle mass or gynecomastia. This notion stems from early rodent studies using high doses of isolated isoflavones, but human clinical evidence contradicts it. A 2021 meta-analysis of 41 studies involving over 1,700 men found no effects of soy protein or isoflavone intake on total testosterone, free testosterone, estradiol, estrone, or sex hormone-binding globulin, regardless of dose or duration.[221] Another meta-analysis of 15 placebo-controlled trials confirmed that neither soy foods nor isoflavone supplements alter bioavailable testosterone concentrations in men.[234] Observational data from populations with high soy intake, such as in Asia, show no corresponding patterns of hormonal disruption or feminization.[235] Another myth posits that soy's goitrogenic compounds inhibit thyroid function, exacerbating hypothyroidism or requiring avoidance in those with thyroid issues. While raw soybeans contain goitrogens that can interfere with iodine uptake in iodine-deficient conditions, processing like cooking or fermentation largely inactivates them, and human studies demonstrate minimal impact in iodine-sufficient individuals. A 2019 systematic review and meta-analysis of 12 randomized controlled trials concluded that soy supplementation has no effect on thyroid hormones (T3, T4) and only modestly elevates TSH levels (by about 0.18 mIU/L), with unclear clinical relevance.[226] A 2022 review of 417 studies affirmed that soy isoflavones do not negatively affect thyroid function, hormone levels, or iodine status in healthy adults.[236] Concerns arise primarily from soy's potential to reduce levothyroxine absorption if consumed concurrently, but spacing intake by several hours mitigates this without necessitating avoidance.[237] Claims that genetically modified (GMO) soybeans, which constitute over 90% of U.S. production since their introduction in 1996, pose unique health risks—such as increased allergenicity, toxicity, or cancer—lack substantiation from long-term human data. Regulatory assessments by bodies like the FDA and National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine have consistently found GMO soy as safe as conventional varieties, with no evidence of novel hazards from inserted genes.[238] [239] A 2022 evaluation of adverse events reported no causal links between GMO food consumption and serious outcomes like mortality or fertility decline in humans.[240] Pesticide residues like glyphosate on GMO soy are regulated below safety thresholds, and epidemiological studies show no elevated health risks; myths often amplify unverified animal data or conflate correlation with causation absent controlled evidence.[241] The assertion that soy universally promotes cancer, particularly hormone-sensitive types like breast or prostate, misinterprets early in vitro findings while ignoring epidemiological trends. Meta-analyses indicate soy intake correlates with reduced prostate cancer risk (by up to 26% in high consumers) and neutral or protective effects against breast cancer recurrence, attributed to isoflavones' weak estrogen modulation rather than promotion.[242] [243] No causal evidence supports increased cancer incidence from moderate soy consumption in humans.[235]Environmental and Sustainability Issues
Biodiversity and Habitat Impacts
Soybean cultivation drives substantial habitat conversion, primarily through cropland expansion into forests, savannas, and grasslands, with global soybean production area more than doubling over the past two decades. Between 2001 and 2015, 8.2 million hectares of forest were directly replaced by soybean fields worldwide, concentrated in South America.[244] Unsustainable land clearing endangers unique ecosystems, including Brazil's Cerrado savanna and Argentina's Gran Chaco, where native vegetation supports high levels of endemic species.[245] In Brazil, soybean expansion has been a key factor in deforestation, though direct conversion rates vary by biome and policy. The Amazon Soy Moratorium, implemented in 2006, has effectively curbed soy-related deforestation in the Amazon, with 97.6% of post-moratorium clearing not entering monitored supply chains by 2023.[246] However, production has shifted to the Cerrado, where soy fields replaced native habitats at rates threatening 3.6 million hectares by 2050 without extended safeguards.[247] Much expansion occurs on former pastures, but this indirectly displaces livestock into uncleared areas, amplifying forest loss.[131] In 2021–2022, deforestation and conversion linked to Brazilian soy rose to 794,000 hectares.[248] Monoculture dominance in soybean farming exacerbates biodiversity decline by simplifying ecosystems, reducing genetic diversity, and fostering conditions for pests and soil degradation that require intensive chemical inputs.[249] These practices fragment habitats, displace wildlife such as birds and mammals adapted to native vegetation, and pollute adjacent areas via runoff, harming aquatic and terrestrial species.[250] In the U.S., where soybeans occupy converted cropland with less recent habitat impact, historical expansion still contributed to grassland losses in the Midwest.[251] Overall, soy's role as the second-largest direct driver of deforestation after cattle pasture underscores its outsized effect on global biodiversity hotspots.[252]Resource Use and Emissions
Soybean production is characterized by relatively efficient resource use compared to many row crops, owing to its biological nitrogen fixation, which supplies 50–80 kg of nitrogen per metric ton of seed without substantial synthetic inputs.[253] Global average yields have risen to approximately 2.8 metric tons per hectare, reflecting improvements in land use efficiency driven by genetic advances and agronomic practices, though yields vary by region with U.S. benchmarks reaching 3.16 t/ha.[254][255] Energy inputs for cultivation typically range from 4,000 to 15,500 megajoules per hectare, primarily from machinery, drying, and indirect fertilizer production for phosphorus and potassium, with U.S. farmers reducing energy use per bushel by 35–46% since 1980 through precision practices.[256][257][258] Water consumption in soybean farming relies predominantly on green water (rainfall), with limited irrigation in major rainfed regions like the U.S. Midwest and Argentine Pampas; the crop's total water footprint averages around 300–400 liters per kg of seed when including supply chain elements, though grey water pollution from runoff is notable at 96–121 l/kg in intensive areas due to agrochemical leaching.[259] Synthetic nitrogen fertilizers are rarely applied, as field trials confirm minimal yield gains from additions, minimizing associated resource demands and emissions from production.[260] Phosphorus and potassium applications, however, contribute to nutrient runoff risks, though soybean's lower overall fertilizer intensity—compared to nitrogen-heavy cereals—enhances resource efficiency. Greenhouse gas emissions from soybean cultivation, excluding land-use change, average 185–200 kg CO₂-equivalent per metric ton in North American systems, with major sources including nitrous oxide from soil, fuel combustion in machinery, and fertilizer manufacturing.[261][262] In the U.S., emissions intensity declined 19% from 2015 to 2021 due to higher yields and reduced inputs per unit output.[263] Argentine production emits around 0.89 t CO₂-eq per ton of soybean, with energy-related sources like natural gas in processing contributing significantly downstream.[264] Overall, soybeans exhibit lower emissions per ton than beef or dairy but higher than some cereals when normalized for protein content, with variability tied to soil management and regional practices rather than inherent crop traits.[265]GMO-Related Environmental Claims
The adoption of herbicide-tolerant (HT) genetically modified (GM) soybeans, primarily Roundup Ready varieties introduced in 1996, has been associated with shifts in farming practices that proponents claim yield environmental benefits, particularly through enabling no-till and reduced-till agriculture. No-till practices, facilitated by post-emergence application of glyphosate, minimize soil disturbance, reducing erosion rates by up to 80% compared to conventional tillage and preserving soil organic matter, which supports carbon sequestration.[266][267] In the United States, where over 90% of soybeans are HT GM varieties as of 2024, this has correlated with widespread no-till adoption, lowering fuel consumption by an estimated 1.2 billion liters annually across GM crops including soybeans from 1996 to 2020, equivalent to reduced CO2 emissions of about 33 million tons per year.[152][268] However, these benefits depend on sustained glyphosate efficacy; critics note that no-till reliance assumes effective weed control, which has been challenged by evolving resistance.[269] Claims of reduced overall pesticide environmental impact from HT soybeans are mixed, with meta-analyses showing GM crops broadly decreased chemical pesticide use by 37% and environmental impact quotients (EIQ) by 17-19% from 1996 to 2020, driven partly by soybean adoption replacing more toxic herbicides like atrazine with glyphosate, which has lower mammalian toxicity.[270][268][10] Yet, U.S. data indicate HT soybean adopters applied 28% more herbicide (0.30 kg/ha) on average than non-adopters from 1996 to 2015, contributing to a net increase of 239 million kg in U.S. herbicide use over that period, largely glyphosate.[271][272] This rise stems from glyphosate's cost-effectiveness and simplicity encouraging broader application, not solely yield needs, though per-hectare toxicity metrics improved due to substitution effects.[10] A major counterclaim involves the evolution of glyphosate-resistant weeds, or "superweeds," with 49 species confirmed resistant globally by 2023, including key soybean weeds like Palmer amaranth and waterhemp in the U.S., where glyphosate use on corn, cotton, and soybeans surged from 15 million pounds in 1996 to 159 million pounds in 2012.[273][274] This has prompted integrated weed management, including tillage resurgence in some areas (up to 10-20% of fields), potentially offsetting no-till gains, and diversification to more toxic herbicides like dicamba and 2,4-D, with dicamba off-target damage affecting millions of acres annually since 2017 approvals.[275][271] Empirical field studies show no widespread biodiversity loss directly attributable to HT soybeans, but localized increases in resistant weed prevalence have raised concerns over long-term ecosystem resilience, though gene flow to wild relatives remains negligible due to soybean's limited feral populations and interfertility.[276] Overall, while initial HT adoption lowered certain impacts, long-term data highlight trade-offs, with benefits accruing more reliably in reduced toxicity and tillage practices than in absolute pesticide volume reductions.[277][278]Economic and Trade Dynamics
Global Market Overview
Brazil leads global soybean production, accounting for approximately 40% of the total output with an estimated 169 million metric tons in the 2024/2025 marketing year, followed by the United States at 28% with 118.84 million metric tons.[5] Argentina ranks third, producing around 48 million metric tons, while China and India contribute smaller shares at 21 million and 12 million metric tons, respectively.[98] Worldwide production reached about 420.76 million metric tons in 2024, driven primarily by expanded acreage in South America amid favorable weather and high yields in key regions.[279] The soybean market is dominated by exports from Brazil, the United States, and Argentina, which together supply nearly 90% of global trade volumes.[280] U.S. soybean exports totaled 52.21 million metric tons in the 2024/2025 period, valued at $24.47 billion, with China as the primary destination absorbing over 50% of U.S. shipments in recent years despite fluctuating trade policies.[281] Global trade volumes are projected to hover around 170-180 million metric tons annually, influenced by demand for soybean meal in animal feed (about 75% of use) and oil for food and biodiesel.[132] Soybean prices have trended downward in 2024 and into 2025 due to ample supply from record Brazilian harvests and subdued demand growth, with Chicago Board of Trade futures averaging around $10.29 per bushel by late 2025, a decline from $14.16 in 2023.[282] Volatility persists from factors like weather disruptions, biofuel mandates in importing nations, and geopolitical tensions affecting U.S.-China flows, though oversupply has capped upside potential.[104] The U.S. domestic market, valued at $52.16 billion in 2024, reflects similar pressures, with projections for growth to $74.63 billion by 2033 contingent on export recovery and domestic processing expansion.[283]Trade Patterns and Influences
Brazil and the United States have historically dominated global soybean exports, accounting for the majority of traded volumes, while China serves as the principal importer, absorbing over half of worldwide soybean shipments primarily for animal feed and edible oil production. In 2023, Brazil led exports with $53.1 billion in value, followed by the United States at $27.2 billion and Paraguay at $3.26 billion; Argentina and Canada ranked next among significant suppliers. China imported $56.6 billion worth that year, representing about 60% of global soybean imports, with the European Union, Mexico, and Indonesia as secondary markets. Export volumes reflect production strengths: Brazil shipped over 100 million metric tons (MMT) in recent years, capturing 72% of its exports to China on average from 2021-2024, while U.S. exports to China fell to near zero in mid-2025 amid ongoing tensions.[284][285][284][281][286]| Top Soybean Exporters (2023 Value) | USD Billion |
|---|---|
| Brazil | 53.1 |
| United States | 27.2 |
| Paraguay | 3.26 |
| Argentina | ~3.0 (est.) |
| Canada | ~2.0 (est.) |
