By
Rebekah Ray MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Aflatoxin takes its toll on Mississippi corn
production, but two scientists at Mississippi State
University have recently released a weapon to fight the
fungus. U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service
plant geneticist Paul Williams and plant pathologist Gary L.
Windham developed the germplasm Mp715 that was released by
the USDA-ARS and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry
Experiment Station. "Aflatoxin
research has been underway at MSU for more than 20 years,
but as corn becomes more popular in Mississippi, the need
for this research increases," Williams said. "Unlike the
Midwest corn-producing states, Mississippi growers have to
contend with extreme heat, humidity and drought-stressed
plants almost every year. All three of those weather factors
are conducive to aflatoxin development." Grain
containing aflatoxin is toxic to animals. Grain elevators
reduce prices for infected corn or reject whole truckloads
if the contamination is extreme. Williams said estimated
losses in Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas due to aflatoxin
exceeded $85 million in 1998. Germplasms
such as Mp715 introduce superior genetic traits into
existing seeds for production of improved crops. Mp715 was
developed from the variety Tuxpan in a selective breeding
program aimed at developing plants resistant to aflatoxin
contamination. "While
developing the germplasm is an important step in creating a
resistant plant, the process of making a marketable hybrid
can take 10 years or more," Williams said. "Mp715 is the
third germplasm line we've released, with the last one
released in 1991. There are no hybrids with aflatoxin
resistance available to growers. Researchers with commercial
seed corn companies are still working on developing
aflatoxin-resistant hybrids that perform well." Few
other methods have been used successfully to fight
aflatoxin. Producers can minimize the threat by harvesting
early and reducing fungal exposure to warm, humid conditions
during dry down by artificially drying the corn. Wet grain
that is not dried quickly during warm conditions will begin
heating up and aflatoxin will increase to intolerable levels
rapidly. Corn
production dominates American agriculture. The United States
is the world's largest exporter of corn, supplying 80
percent of the world demand. Mississippi
corn growers in 1998 posted a second year of significant
declines. After a record 1996 crop, corn's value drop about
35 percent in 1997 and was estimated to drop another 38
percent in 1998. Corn's farm gate value changed from almost
$204 million in 1996 to $133 million in 1997. For 1998, the
estimated corn value was $82.4 million. Editor's
Note: Linda Breazeale contributed to this
article. Released:
Feb. 8, 1999
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Agricultural
Scientists Battle Corn Fungus
For more information, contact: Paul Williams, (601) 325-2735
or Gary Windham, (601) 323-2230
Visit: DAFVM
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