By
Linda Breazeale GRENADA
-- Cotton growers from Mississippi's eastern counties
recently aired complaints against 1995's boll weevil
eradication efforts and received information on improvements
planned for 1996. Growers
from Region IV's 29 counties down the eastern side of the
state joined growers from across Mississippi at the annual
meeting of the Mississippi Boll Weevil Management Corp. in
Grenada. A
devastating insect year resulted in growers from several
counties accusing eradication efforts for low yields and
crop failures. Dr.
Blake Layton, extension entomologist at Mississippi State
University, said eradication efforts may have contributed to
the tobacco budworm problem, but they were not the
cause. "Tobacco
budworms hit the state earlier and in higher numbers than
normal -- both inside and outside the eradication zone,"
Layton said. "The main thing that is clear is the worms
attacked the hill area of Mississippi most severely. This
would indicate climate as the key factor in the excessive
numbers." Several
improvements in the eradication program were explained
during the meeting. These changes are planned to make trap
monitoring easier, reduce the risk to beneficial insects and
to increase grower input on the program. Fewer
traps can be used in 1996 in Region IV to provide
information effectively because Region IV is considered a
buffer zone, rather than an eradication zone. This year one
trap will be set for every 5 acres of cotton with a minimum
of three traps per field. In 1995, the rate was about one
trap to every acre. With fewer traps, management will be
less labor intensive and therefore, less costly. Grower
concerns over insecticide resistance to secondary pests
resulted in the recommendation for fewer midseason sprayings
to control weevils. Growers will be able to request
midseason sprays as the need arises rather than basing
insecticide applications primarily on trap
catches. "We're
willing to offer growers who are opposed to the program a
blank piece of paper and to make the program whatever they
want to get rid of boll weevils," said Kenneth Hood,
president of the Mississippi Boll Weevil Management Corp.
"We want to continue the program across the state as soon as
possible. I wish the region of the state that my farm is in
was already in the eradication program," said Hood, a
Bolivar County cotton grower. Released:
Jan. 29, 1996
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Cotton Growers
Demand, Receive Answers
Contact: Dr. George Mullendore (601) 325-2993
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:46
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