By
Linda Breazeale STARKVILLE
-- Don't let the name fool you, tobacco
budworms
love
cotton. Extremely high numbers have invaded
Mississippi's
hill
section fields at levels that defy control efforts
-- seriously
lessening yield potential. Tobacco
budworms are the primary pest cotton farmers
must control.
They feed on cotton squares and bolls (usually less
than 20
days old) resulting in those bolls shedding from the
plants. These
pests do not damage the leaves, so plants appear healthy
at first
glance. Dr.
Blake Layton, extension entomologist at
Mississippi
State
University, said while tobacco budworms can be
found statewide,
the most intense pressure is in the hill
counties,
from
the northeastern counties down to Natchez. "Growers
have experienced 50 to 70 percent control
from insecticides,
but with such high numbers, even 90 percent
control hasn't
been good enough," Layton said. "What
makes this situation worse is that yield potential
was so
good before the tobacco budworms hit about three weeks
ago," Layton
said. "Many growers spent $60 to $70 per acre trying
to control
this last generation of tobacco budworms and
still sustained
excessive yield losses. It is hard to estimate
the total
percentage lost." Layton
said some fields have lost 500 to 800 pounds of
lint potential
per acre where there may have been 700 to 1,000
pounds of
lint potential. The
entomologist said in past years, he considered 5
percent boll
damage heavy. This year, he has seen up to 90 percent
boll damage
in some fields. Tobacco budworms also hit earlier
this year
and in higher numbers than normal. Some
cotton growers may choose to abandon heavily
infested
fields
and determine later if they are worth harvesting.
Layton said
growers make these decisions based on the number
of undamaged
bolls, boll maturity, insect damage potential and
the stage
and development of the crop. "Some
cotton fields are nearing the stage when they will
be reasonably
safe from insect damage. Most bolls are
reasonably
safe
from attack at 18 to 20 days of age. Certainly,
excessive
numbers
of tobacco budworms can and will damage bolls
much older,"
Layton said. Compounding
the problem is the fact that
subsequent
generations
have more resistance to insecticides and come
in higher
numbers. Layton said supplies of insecticides also
are running
low. "Consultants
and growers did an excellent job of
detecting
the
tobacco budworms and trying to control them. They
just couldn't
compete against those high numbers," Layton said.
"Some fields
in the hills were not as damaged by high
insect populations
and their yield potential is good." In
Yazoo County, where 65 percent of the cotton acres are
in the
Delta and 35 percent are in the hills, growers are seeing
a difference
in tobacco budworm populations. "Most
Delta farmers have been able to maintain some
control.
Although
no hill farmers have had 100 percent of their
acreage affected,
it has been a disastrous crop for some growers in
the hills,"
said Tim Pepper, Yazoo County agent. "We don't know
for sure
why the insect numbers have been so much higher in
the hills." Pepper
said he expects some fields to go unharvested
based on
the amount of insect pressure. Dr.
David Roberts, Monroe County agent, said all
farmers have
some fields where they may end control efforts. Some
farmers are
considering abandoning their total acreage. Most
decisions
will
be made in the next few weeks as growers assess their
crop's potential. "To
make matters worse, we are finding damaging levels
of beet
armyworms in some parts of the county," Roberts
said. "Farmers
have some tough decisions to make about putting
more money
in the fields to protect future yields." Layton
said the tobacco budworm problems are not unique
to the
29 counties along the Alabama state line involved in the
boll weevil
eradication program. "Tobacco
budworm infestations started earlier and were
more intense
initially in the hill counties outside the boll
weevil eradication
area," Layton said. Released:
Aug. 11, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton Pests
Defy Control
Contact: Dr. Blake Layton,
(601)
325-208
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0811.html
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