By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi cotton growers will vote in June on the
continuing efforts to hold boll weevils at bay. "At
least 50 percent of the cotton growers in Regions 3 and 4
(the hill section) will have to vote, and two-thirds of the
majority will have to agree to the assessments of $12 per
acre annually for the next 10 years for the program to
continue," said John Swayze, Yazoo County cotton grower and
board president for the Boll Weevil Management Corp.
Ballots
will be mailed from the county Farm Service Agency offices
on June 4. Growers must return ballots to their county FSA
offices by June 15 for the count on June 21. "Region
3 is currently paying $24 per acre and Region 4 is paying
$20 per acre," Swayze said. "The new assessments will go to
paying off the debts connected to the high costs of
eradication and maintaining the program in the years to
come." Swayze
said efforts to lobby for federal assistance to defray the
cost will continue after the vote. "The
odds are real good that in some years we may need less than
$12 per acre, primarily if we get help from the federal
government," he said. Blake
Layton, cotton entomologist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said most growers recognize
the benefit of the organized eradication effort. "Before
the eradication effort, growers were spending and/or losing
around $50 to $60 per acre because of boll weevils," Layton
said. "Now, not only is the cost much less, but there is
zero yield lost." Layton
said about $160 million has been spent in the last five
years eradicating the boll weevil from Mississippi. Without
efforts to maintain the program, boll weevils would be able
to re-establish their foothold in the state and put growers
back to square one. "It will
certainly cost a lot less to keep them out than to
re-eradicate or control them through normal methods," Layton
said. "The
best news is that we've had the type of winter that will
kill a lot of boll weevils. It's the first winter like that
since eradication efforts started in the state," Layton
said. "That will help keep control costs down this
season." Boll
weevils came to Mississippi in 1907 and were entrenched
statewide seven years later. Layton said individual weevils
have been documented to travel as far as 169 miles.
"This
shows how easily they could re-infest the state and why it
is so important to have an effective boll weevil eradication
maintenance program in place," Layton said. Released:
April 20, 2001
Mississippi
Crop Report
Cotton growers
consider final
boll weevil assaults
Five
regions of Mississippi have been engaged in five-year plans
to eradicate cotton's No. 1 pest from all fields. Last year
was the first year since the early 1900s that Mississippi
cotton growers did not lose any yield to boll weevils. To
maintain that ability, growers in the state's hill region
will have to agree to assessments supporting the organized
eradication efforts.
Contact:
Dr. Blake Layton, (662) 325-2085
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:20
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop01/010420.htm
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