By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A farmer has a much greater need to know local
weather information than someone trying to decide whether or
not to carry an umbrella, so for the last four years,
Mississippi State University has provided this detailed data
to Delta growers. "Producers
need immediate radar and weather information and cumulative
data to make day-to-day decisions," said Charlie Estess,
northwest district Extension program director at the Delta
Research and Extension Center in Stoneville. "We're trying
to help producers develop their plans and have the data and
information they need at their fingertips to make wise
decisions as they spend their resources." Since
1997, MSU has received U.S. Department of Agriculture
funding to collect and provide important weather data for
agriculture through Extension and the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station. Today, nine
Automated Weather Stations, the National Weather Service in
Jackson, and the Southern Regional Climate Center in Baton
Rouge supply weather data which is processed and offered to
farmers. One of
the important uses this information serves is in helping
cotton and rice farmers reduce production costs. The data
collected known as DD60s aid cotton growers, while DD50s are
for rice producers. DD stands for degree days, and are heat
units based on a day's maximum and minimum air temperatures.
For example, DD60 is an accumulation of heat units per day
based on average temperatures over 60 degrees. "Cotton
is our No. 1 row crop and has traditionally generated the
most revenue," Estess said. "Cotton also has the highest
operating cost, and the margin of profit has dramatically
reduced over the last several years." Cotton
insecticides cost an average of $85 to $90 per acre each
year. A team at the Delta Research and Extension Center has
researched and promoted a formula to lower insecticide costs
by $30 an acre by eliminating an average of 2.5 insecticide
applications a year. This program requires heat unit
accumulation data to determine when pesticide applications
can end. Armed with this data, farmers can stop spraying
earlier than if they simply followed a calendar. The
rice DD50 program uses similar information. Farmers input
the variety of rice and set the program according to the
date of a particular development point. This program uses
current weather data, along with historical data, to project
the rice's growing season, and alert farmers to when they
should do such things as fertilize, flood the field or watch
for water weevils. "The
vital thing we needed was area-specific heat unit
accumulation data for producers, researchers and others in
the industry to be able to determine when to take certain
actions," Estess said. Last
year, about 55 percent of the Delta's 1 million acres of
cotton used the DD60 system. "The
Weather Project provides data on heat unit accumulation that
saved Delta farmers $16 million in 2000 by enabling some to
eliminate an average of two insecticide applications on
their fields," Estess said. Farmers
access current and archived data from a website. From this
site, viewers can see raw interactive daily weather data,
radar and satellite information, forecasts, crop updates and
other information. Bart
Freeland, Geographic Information System and weather research
assistant in Stoneville, said the website offering the
detailed weather information gets about 10,000 hits a month
during the growing season. "Some
farmers use it on a daily basis to help monitor their crops'
progress," Freeland said. Information
from the Delta Weather Project is updated daily. Producers
can access this information online at www.deltaweather.msstate.edu. Released
February 19, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Extension
weather data aids decisions
In
1996, the National Weather Service stopped offering
agricultural weather and climate services from Stoneville
and other similar locations nationwide. When this happened,
farmers no longer could get ag weather forecasts, advisories
and observations, frost forecasts, 30-day ag weather outlook
or specialized ag services.
For more information, contact: Charlie Estess, (662)
686-3264
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:38
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010219ce.htm
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