"In order to protect agroecosystems and to optimize soybean crop yield from the Transylvanian Plain,
the adoption of complex methods of sustainable management with minimal impact on the environment has now
become a challenge. Therefore, an experiment was conducted at the Agricultural Research-Development Station
Turda in 2018, to provide the best methods for the development of an Integrated Management System (IMS) for
phytosanitary soybean crop risks. The field factorial experiment was based on a subdivided parcel design with
two replications. Experimental models for soybean crop protection have been developed. Field research was
carried out for analyzing the technological (agricultural practices), biological (diseases, insects, pests) and
environmental (climate change, methods of improving soil fertility with phytosanitary risk by applying
environmentally friendly products) factors affecting soybean crop yield and quality. An entomological sampling
strategy (pheromone traps, plant surveys) was used for evaluating the IMS environmental risk and methods for
increasing plant resistance to biotic and abiotic stress factors were also studied. The obtained data was correlated
with the production values for the 3 experimental factors: the tillage system, fertilization and treatments. The
following pests were recorded, soil pests Coleoptera, Agriotes larvae, Opatrum, dipterans Delia platura and D.
florilega, vectors of viruses and phytoplasmoses, cicadas, aphids, trips and the common red spider Tetranychus
urticae, defoliating omissions Vanessa cardui, owls Autographa gamma, Mamestra suasa, M. oleracea, Agrotis
segetum) etc. In the climatic conditions of 2018, most frequent pathogens were downy mildew (Peronospora
manshurica and bacterial blight Pseudomonas glycinae."