By
Bethany Waldrop Keiper STONEVILLE
-- As Mississippi's rice growers begin
harvest,
few
expect to reap last year's record breaking
yields. This
summer's sizzling temperatures have reduced quality
as well
as yields in some cases. "This
year's rice yields are certainly nothing to write
home about,"
said Dr. Ted Miller, extension rice specialist
in Stoneville.
"In the rice that has been harvested, some grains
are not
as plump as they could be -- one effect of the recent
hot temperatures." Miller
said rice growers are averaging about 126 bushels
per acre. State
rice production for 1995 is expected to be
17.4 million
hundredweight, compared with 18.5 million
hundredweight
for
1994. Acreage for harvest is estimated at 295,000 acres,
down 6
percent from 1994. Although
yield per acre has been estimated to equal
last year's
record-breaking numbers, many state growers are
expecting
lower
yields. "As
harvest begins, growers are seeing average
early yields,"
said Don Respess, Bolivar County agent. "In
some varieties,
the heat has reduced rice quality." James
Smith, with Delta Rice in Cleveland, said early
yields appear
to be 10 to 15 percent lower than last year. "You
make less rice when temperatures are this hot --
the temperatures
also make disease more of a problem," Smith
said. "This
adds up to lower milling quality for the rice and
lower prices
to growers." Rice
prices have declined recently as harvest
time approaches. DeWitt
Caillavet, extension agricultural economist
at Mississippi
State University, said recent rice prices have
ranged from
$7.90 to $8.20 per hundredweight. "Prices
are in a tug of war between two factors,"
Caillavet
said.
"You have the beginning of harvest and better than
expected
yields
pulling on the negative side, and the
increasing
underlying
demand in the world market tugging on the
positive
side." Released:
Aug. 25, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
State Growers
Expect Reduced Rice Yields
Contact: Dr. Ted Miller,
(601)
686-9311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:19
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0825.html
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