By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A dry growing season means Mississippi cotton
matured a lot faster than normal, but with this early
maturing came reduced yields. Will
McCarty, cotton specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said cotton is being
harvested three weeks earlier than normal this
year. "I don't
like to see much cotton defoliated and picked prior to the
first of September because that's an indication we're giving
up on some of our growing season," McCarty said. "This year,
we had some cotton picked around Aug. 18. By the first week
of September, about 90 percent of the cotton in the state
was mature enough to be defoliated, if it hadn't been
already." Heat and
drought caused this early maturity. McCarty said cotton is
commonly thought to be a desert plant, but it is actually
more of a tropical plant native to Southern Mexico and
Central America. "Cotton
can tolerate more hot and dry conditions that a lot of row
crops, but that doesn't mean it will flourish under those
conditions," McCarty said. With
drought all summer, the success of this year's crop depended
on irrigation. McCarty estimated dryland cotton yields of
100 to 600 pounds an acre, and irrigated cotton to yield
below average with 750 to 1,100 pounds an acre.
Mississippi's five-year average is 744 pounds. The Aug.
1 National Agricultural Statistics Service report estimated
a Mississippi overall crop of 738 pounds an acre, but
McCarty expects it to be much lower. 1999 average yields
were just 704 pounds an acre. In 1980,
the year in recent history that most closely duplicates
2000, Mississippi harvested 1.1 million acres at an average
488 pounds an acre. With 200,000 more acres planted this
year, much of this cotton grew on less productive land. Heat
and drought compounded disadvantages. "The
odds of us having a good cotton crop are very bad," McCarty
said. "It's still too early to get a handle on quality, but
I anticipate seeing short staple cotton, which means growers
may receive additional discounts when they sell." With
prices lower than they were at planting, it seems the only
good news was that insect pressure was fairly light this
year, allowing farmers to make their crop a little bit
cheaper. Jimbo
Burkhalter, area Extension agent in Tallahatchie County,
said his county planted 80,500 acres of cotton with less
than half of it irrigated. He described anticipated yields
as not being a brag crop, but tolerable. "Our
irrigated cotton is going to have pretty good yields, but I
believe our averages are going to go down," Burkhalter said.
"By the Fourth of July, our unirrigated cotton could have
been a record year, but we haven't had any rain to speak of
since then and the cotton just hasn't put on the fruit and
developed like it should have had we gotten just one or two
rains." Variety
selection was important this year, as some varieties proved
themselves to be more heat tolerant than others and
performed better. Released:
Sept. 8, 2000
Mississippi
Crop Report
Cotton Yields
Hurt By A Lack Of Rain
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty, (662) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:28:20
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop00/cr000908.htm
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