By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Five years of eradication efforts are making the
boll weevil a scarce pest in Mississippi cotton. Released:
July 30, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
State boll
weevil numbers plunge
The most recent counts show the state has less than 1
percent of the boll weevils it had in fields last year. By
late July 2000, about 1.1 million boll weevils had been
trapped in Mississippi's cotton fields. This year, 10,442
have been captured. Last year's numbers were down more than
50 percent from the previous year.
Jeannine Smith, executive director of the Mississippi Boll
Weevil Management Corporation, said workers bait boll weevil
traps and set them out the first of May for weekly counts
until the first hard frost or cotton harvest. Boll weevils
are caught in green, cone-shaped plastic and wire traps
placed on poles around cotton fields.
"Close to 98 percent of Mississippi's cotton fields have had
no weevils trapped this year," Smith said. "Of those fields
where boll weevils have been trapped, the state average is
.0006 weevils per acre."
Boll weevil eradication is a coordinated effort that is
moving west across the United States in a scheduled
progression. It was started in parts of eastern Mississippi
in August 1997, and now includes the whole state.
Mississippi is divided into four regions, with Regions 3,
the central and southwestern part of the state, and Region
4, the eastern-most counties, being the first in the
program. Region 2, the south Delta, joined the program in
1998 and Region 1, the north Delta, joined in 1999. In each
region, growers voted to enter the program and be assessed
fees for five years.
These annual per acre fees cover the costs of spraying
affected fields with malathion for boll weevil control.
Spraying by aerial and ground application is done when
certain numbers of boll weevils are trapped in a field.
"The cost of participation in the program is less than what
the grower himself would have to pay to spray for the
weevils," Smith said. "The areas that have been in the
program the longest have the fewest numbers of boll
weevils."
With eradication well underway, growers in Region 3 and 4
recently voted to enter a maintenance program for the next
10 years. Region 2 will vote in 2002 and Region 1 in 2003 on
whether to enter this maintenance program at the completion
of active eradication.
"The program has been extremely successful, and we look
forward to finishing eradication and maintaining a state
free of boll weevils," Smith said. "This is the first year
that Mississippi is surrounded by states involved in boll
weevil eradication. We had been the buffer zone between
eradicated and non-eradicated areas, but as the program
continues to spread west, we'll move out of that buffer
zone."
Aubrey Harris, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry
Experiment Station entomologist at the Delta Research and
Extension Center in Stoneville, said boll weevils moved into
Texas from Mexico in 1892. They moved east across the Cotton
Belt, entering Mississippi in 1907 and reaching the East
Coast by 1922.
"Eradication is a comprehensive insect management program,
with the goal of eliminating every last one of them in the
country," Harris said.
Eradication is working well in Mississippi. 2000 was the
first year on record with no losses to boll weevils.
"We're dealing now with extremely low numbers of boll
weevils that are actually undetectable by normal methods,"
Harris said. "If you were visually scouting cotton fields,
you probably wouldn't find weevils or weevil damage. Last
year, there were still a few fields where weevils could be
visually detected late in the season. I expect that to be
very rare in 2001."
Eradication efforts are being continued to prevent
reinfestation as the program moves west. Harris said careful
monitoring must be done for the next 10 years to ensure the
weevil does not get another stronghold in the state. Weevils
can advance about 50 miles a year through normal migration,
but can travel cross-country in days hitchhiking on vehicles
or farm equipment.
For more information, contact:
Jeannine
Smith, (662) 325-2993
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:39
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010730.htm
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