By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Economists with the U.S. Department
of Agriculture
announced their crop predictions Friday in
the planting
intentions report, but Mother Nature and farmers
will get
the final word. Dr.
Alan Blaine, extension agronomist at Mississippi
State University,
said although there were no major surprises in
the acreage
estimates, actual plantings will hinge on the
weather. "Weather
always influences crop acreages. Delayed
plantings
because
of rain will force farmers to second choice crops
with later
planting dates," Blaine said. The
biggest change from 1994 is in cotton acreage.
USDA economists
expect Mississippi growers to plant 220,000
more cotton
acres in 1995. They also expect the national cotton
crop to
increase by 2.47 million acres. Dr. Bob
Williams, interim state leader of the
extension
agriculture
and natural resources program at MSU, said the
cotton acreage
increase was expected because of the recent higher
prices and
the zero acreage reduction provisions. In 1994,
cotton growers
were eligible for government assistance programs if
they set
aside 11 percent of their cotton base acres. Williams
said the announcement of the planting
intentions
report
had an initially positive impact on corn and
cotton prices.
National corn acreage had been expect to be higher
than the
announced 75.233 million acres. "We
expect to see some corn and soybean land going
into cotton
acres in 1995," Williams said. The
report predicts Mississippi's soybean growers to
plant 1.9
million acres, a 50,000-acre decrease from 1994.
About 320,000
acres of corn are expected in 1995 for a decrease
of 10,000
acres. USDA
economists also expect 25,000 fewer acres of rice
and 10,000
fewer acres of grain sorghum in Mississippi.
Mississippi
growers
may plant about 290,000 acres of rice and 65,000 acres
of grain
sorghum in 1995. Released:
March 31, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Mississippi '95
Planting Intentions
Contact: Dr. Bob Williams,
(601)
325-8737
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:17
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0331.html
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