By
Bethany Waldrop Keiper MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- As state cotton growers keep an eye
on rising
cotton prices and river levels, they are
planning
strategies
to battle insect pest attacks on the crop. December
futures currently are trading in the 82-cent to
83- cent
range and have reached life-of-contract highs in the
past week. Dr. Bob
Williams, interim state program leader
for agriculture
and natural resources at Mississippi
State University,
said several factors have boosted prices. "The
tight supply-demand situation relative to U.S.
and world
cotton has pushed up prices," Williams said.
"Delayed
plantings
in Texas, Arkansas, Missouri and South Carolina
also have
been a boost for prices." December
futures are about 16 cents above the
highest average
annual price for the past 10 years. The USDA
is predicting
a 7 percent increase in both U.S. and world
cotton production
for 1995. State
cotton specialists are predicting tough battles
with insects
this year.
The
mild winter weather has allowed cotton pests to
come back
in full force for the 1995 growing season. "If we
look at the state's cotton crop with a wide
angle view,
it looks good overall -- off to a good start," said
Dr. Will
McCarty, extension cotton specialist at MSU. "But if
we focus
in on the crop, we see a lot of problems." McCarty
said boll weevils are not the only pest concern
for many
growers. "Boll
weevil numbers are high in traps and fields across
the state,
but there also are a lot of plantbugs in the
Delta," McCarty
said. "The plantbugs are now concentrated in other
host crops,
but when these crops die out, the plantbugs will move
to cotton
fields." Thrips
numbers also are high this year. Thrips can pose
a threat
to young cotton plants. Slowed growth in April left
much of
the state crop vulnerable to thrips. "Boll
weevil numbers are the highest I've ever seen,"
said Charlie
Estess, area cotton specialist in Coahoma
County. "Virtually
all cotton will need pinhead square applications
of pesticides." Cotton
plants set fruit during the pinhead square
stage. Pinhead
square applications also are planned for areas
involved
in
the state's boll weevil eradication program. "The
boll weevil eradication management groups are
planning
two
pinhead square applications on most of our cotton," said
Dave Roberts,
Monroe County agent. "Usually, we need one
application,
but
high weevil numbers make two necessary." As
insect numbers continue to rise, so do the waters of
the Mississippi
River. The river is expected to crest in early
June around
Vicksburg. "Several
thousand acres of cotton along the river
from Issaquena
County to Wilkinson County will be totally lost
to flooding,"
McCarty said. John
Cocarro, cotton agent for Sharkey, Issaquena
and Humphreys
counties, said the river is expected to crest about
3 feet
above the flood stage at Vicksburg. "By the
time the flood waters are gone, it will be too
late to
replant the cotton," Coccaro said. More
than 50 percent of the state's cotton crop was
planted during
May. Although
May 1 is the official date to put boll weevil
traps in
fields, there is still time to get traps in
fields. Growers
use
information from boll weevil trapping to determine the
need for
pinhead square applications.
Data
from trapping also helps the Mississippi Boll
Weevil Management
Corporation plan more efficient eradication
programs. Released:
May 26, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Growers Watch
Cotton Prices, Setbacks Rise
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty,
(601)
325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0526.html
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.