Early
rice yields indicate
one Mississippi crop success
By Bonnie Coblentz
MISSISSIPPI STATE
-- Rice may set a state record average yield this year and be the bright
spot across Mississippi’s drought-stricken
farmland if early harvest rates continue.
Nathan Buehring,
rice specialist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service,
said harvest started at the end of August and early yields are promising.
“Everything so far looks good to excellent,” Buehring said. “Our
expectations weren’t as high as what we’re seeing in the
fields. Yields look to be above average and are a lot better than I thought
they would be since we had such excessive heat.”
Hot weather can
prevent the rice kernel from forming, a condition called blanking.
Nighttime temperatures above 75 degrees are worse for the rice than
daytime temperatures above 95 degrees. The state had many days and
nights above those thresholds, but the rice crop does not seem to have
been hurt by it.
Rice needs a lot
of sunshine to fill out kernels, and Buehring speculated that the numerous
sunny days may have offset the high temperatures.
What did hurt this year were energy and fertilizer prices. Rice uses
nitrogen, a petroleum-based fertilizer, and costs for this input have
continued to rise in recent years. Energy costs to run pumps to flood
rice fields were up dramatically.
“We did not have any rain to help keep some of these fields flooded,” Buehring
said. “Water expenses have been above average as we got no reprieve
from the drought.”
Don Respess, Bolivar
County Extension director, said the excellent early yields in the north
Delta have rice producers feeling optimistic.
“It’s real encouraging to me because everything else has
been very depressed,” Respess said.
Growers struggled
to keep enough water on the fields. They rarely got the assistance
of rain, and although they tried to conserve energy and keep costs
down, many had to run their irrigation pumps nearly all the time, he
said.
Stinkbugs caused
problems in scattered fields, but disease was not a problem this year
because of the clear, hot weather conditions. Respess said rice acres
dropped to 52,000 in Bolivar County, where 75,000 acres is typical.
The expected good yields this year should help bring that number up
again next year, he said.
Rice prices had
been in the $10 per hundredweight range, but recent news of the discovery
of genetically modified traits in some commercial rice shipments sent
the price below $9 per hundredweight. Growers need about $10 per hundredweight
to break even.
Steve Martin, Extension
agricultural economist at the Delta Research and Extension Center in
Stoneville, said several countries are deciding whether or not to accept
U.S. rice exports after the discovery of the herbicide-resistant rice
variety.
“The U.S. Department of Agriculture, the rice trade associations
and rice industry suppliers are working diligently to determine how the
modified rice got into the rice supply as well as to develop an efficient
way of testing future shipments,” Martin said. “Currently,
not a lot is known about the outcome of this situation. This rice
variety has not been grown in several years, so it is unknown exactly
how the variety has shown up recently.”
-30-
Released: September
1, 2006
Contact:
Dr. Nathan Buehring (662) 686-3301, Don Respess (662) 843-8361 or Dr.
John Anderson (662) 325-1788 |