By
Linda Breazeale STARKVILLE
-- High temperatures and scattered showers
are challenging
Mississippi's cotton roots to plunge deeper for
the water
they need to develop and retain bolls. "Any
major stress on a cotton plant in the first
couple weeks
of boll set (development) can cause the loss of
bolls," said
Charlie Estess, Coahoma County extension agent. "We've
seen some boll loss in the recent weeks of
drought and
heat," Estess said. "Some of the scattered showers
have lessened
losses." Estess
said plants looked more stressed (wilted) during
the week
of July 19 than they did a week later. One possible
reason for
the improvement is that root systems have found water
deeper in
the ground. He said spotty showers also have helped
plant appearances
in some fields. About
40 percent of Coahoma County's 110,000 acres of
cotton is
irrigated. "All of
our irrigation systems are running. People
with dryland
cotton are praying for rain," Estess said. "At
this point,
we're feeling good about the crop's potential.
Insect pressure
has been relatively light." In the
Hattiesburg area, growing cotton is a new
experience
for
many farmers. Forrest County agent Lee Taylor said
acreage has
increased from 600 acres in 1994 to between 2,200 and
2,500 acres
this year. Factors
contributing to the four-fold increase are the
boll weevil
eradication program and the desire to find a
more profitable
crop than soybeans or corn. "Soybean
growers do not have a place to market their
crop locally
and prices have not be very good," Taylor said.
"Corn growers
also are having a hard time making the crop
profitable." Taylor
said the cotton has not had any significant boll
loss from
the summer conditions. Much of the crop is improving
after the
initial hot, dry weather stress. "Growers
have battled a lot of insects -- mainly
worms including
the yellow striped armyworm, beet armyworm, loopers
and boll
worms," Taylor said. "Boll weevil numbers are down due
to last
fall's eradication efforts." Taylor
said the yield potential is good to excellent. Dr.
O.A. Cleveland, extension agricultural economist
at Mississippi
State University, said December futures reached
life- of-contract
highs of 84 cents per pound about six weeks ago. Downward
pressure has brought prices about 10 cents lower. "One
factor is that the United States has more
cotton supplies
available than previously expected," Cleveland said.
"At the
same time, U.S. mill consumption is about 200,000 bales
lower than
expected." The
agricultural economist said the extreme slow down
in mill
consumption hit without warning. "The
cotton market probably will remain under pressure
at least
until the Aug. 10 crop report is announced,"
Cleveland
said.
"The national crop should be between 21 million and
22 million
bales. December futures probably will stay in the
mid-70 cents
per pound range." Released:
July 28, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Heat Wave
Challenges State's Cotton Crop
Contact: Charlie Estess,
(601)
624-3070;
Dr.
O.A. Cleveland,
(601)
325-1790
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0728.html
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