Growers shift
fields to least negative crop
By
Linda Breazeale
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The absence of positive incentives is influencing
Mississippi growers to adjust planting intentions to the
crops with the fewest strikes against them: cotton and
sorghum.
The
U.S. Department of Agriculture's prospective plantings
report released March 30 predicts Mississippi farmers will
plant 15 percent more cotton and 11 percent more sorghum
than last year. The only other crop showing any increase in
acreage is rice, which is expected to increase about 2
percent. The biggest loss will be for soybeans, down 12
percent from 1.7 million acres to 1.5 million.
Erick
Larson, grain crops agronomist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said corn planting is
underway, particularly in the Delta. If rains do not subside
soon, growers may switch some fields intended for corn to an
alternative. The USDA prediction is for Mississippi corn
acreage to be down 2 percent around 400,000
acres.
"Grain
sorghum acreage has been steadily increasing in recent
years. Sorghum's appeal as a rotation crop is increasing
this year because it requires substantially less nitrogen
fertilizer than corn, which has the highest nitrogen needs
of all the row crops," Larson said. "Sorghum is also more
drought tolerant than corn and hardy on less productive
soils."
Extension
cotton specialist Will McCarty said if soybean prices hold
and weather allows, Mississippi's total acreage will be
around 1.5 million acres for the first time since 1976.
|
Mississippi's
Planting Intentions
(acres in 1,000s)
|
|
.
|
2000
plantings
|
2001
prediction
|
|
Soybeans
|
1,700
|
1,500
|
|
Cotton
|
1,300
|
1,500
|
|
Corn
|
410
|
400
|
|
Rice
|
220
|
225
|
|
Sorghum
|
90
|
100
|
"Nothing has been able to attract growers away from cotton.
Growers will fertilize cotton, regardless of the cost,"
McCarty said. "Fertilizer prices might impact corn acres,
especially in the midwestern states, and therefore drive
more people to soybeans, depressing soybean prices
further.
"Low
prices of all commodities are causing farmers to look at
planting more cotton and utilizing risk management
alternatives (insurance) to reduce their risks," McCarty
said. "The price outlook for cotton is dismal too, but
farmers hope things will turn around and yields will be good
enough to compensate."
McCarty
said the availability of an insurance program can help
farmers lock in a yield and a price to protect them from a
major loss. The insurance is based on a percentage of their
proven yield (the farmer's or the county's) at a specified
price.
"The
risk management floor provides farmers protection against a
catastrophic loss and can help growers recoup production
costs," McCarty said.
-30-
Released:
March 30, 2001
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty and Dr. Erick Larson, (662)
325-2701
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