By
Crystel Bailey MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- After a summer of extreme heat and dry conditions,
Mississippi cotton farmers now battle low yields, low
quality and low prices. Will
McCarty, cotton specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said dry weather helped
mature cotton faster, which is why more than 90 percent of
harvest was complete in Mississippi by the end of October.
Typically, harvest is 84 percent complete by this time.
Because cotton matured early, yields and quality
suffered. "The
year 2000 is the first time Mississippi cotton growers have
made less than 700 pounds per acre since 1995," McCarty
said. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture crop report released Oct. 12
estimated Mississippi's cotton crop at 638 pounds of lint
per acre. Mississippi farmers harvested 704 pounds of lint
per acre in 1999 due to last year's drought, compared to the
five-year average of 745 pound per acre. "Not
only was yield reduced by weather, but quality was hurt as
well. The overall quality of the 2000 cotton crop is below
average for Mississippi," McCarty said. Extension
agents in Bolivar, Monroe and Sharkey counties all said
prices have suffered from low quality. Of those three
counties, Monroe, which irrigates only 1 percent of its
cotton, suffered most with low yields due to the
drought. "We have
about 17,000 acres of cotton harvested this year and
averaged about 350 pounds of lint per acre," said Charlie
Stokes, Monroe County Extension agent. Don
Respess, Bolivar County Extension agent, said his county
harvested about 72,000 acres of cotton and produced about
700 pounds of lint per acre. While
Sharkey County cotton has lower quality this year, the
number of acres harvested has doubled since 1998, despite
dry conditions. John Coccaro, Sharkey County Extension
agent, said Sharkey land is generally very productive and
does well under any conditions. "We
usually lead cotton yields in the state, with about 900
acres of lint per acre, but this year we averaged around 700
pounds of lint per acre," Coccaro said. Despite
high yields, the county will still be hurt financially.
"Since we have such productive land, our farmers probably
put more inputs into the cotton crop, which increases the
costs of production," Coccaro said. Farmers
across the state are hurting from low prices compounded by
discounts because the quality of the crop was reduced by
heat and drought that shortened and weakened
fibers. "Probably
the average bale of cotton is priced 3 to 5 cents per pound
below average, which totals about a $25 deduction per bale.
The deductions can really add up for cotton farmers with
1,500 or more acres," Cocarro said. The USDA
Agricultural Marketing Service said cotton averaged about 60
cents per pound during the week ending Oct. 19, which is
about 10 cents more than the same week a year ago. However,
the 10-cent increase does not reflect grade deductions or
deficiency payments. Released:
Oct. 27, 2000
Mississippi
Crop Report
State Produces
Lowest Cotton Yields Since '95
Contact: Dr. John Coccaro, (662) 873-4246
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:28:20
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop00/cr001027.htm
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