By
Linda Breazeale STARKVILLE
-- Cotton yields will not be what many
growers dreamed
of when they increased Mississippi's crop by
100,000 acres
to take advantage of stronger prices. Higher than
normal insect
pressure and excessive heat have taken their
toll. "Preliminary
yields do not look good," said Dr.
Will McCarty,
extension cotton specialist at Mississippi
State University. The
Sept. 1 crop report from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture
brought bleak news on the expectations
for Mississippi's
crop. "The
September report estimates 480,000 fewer bales
of cotton
for Mississippi than the August report predicted,"
McCarty said.
"The pounds per acre expectation dropped 158 pounds.
I can't
remember the crop reporting service ever dropping us
that much
in one month." The
cotton specialist said the news could get worse as
the season
finishes. "There
is no doubt that the severe, continuous heat in
July, August
and early September has taken a heavy toll on the
crop," McCarty
said. Dr.
Blake Layton, extension entomologist at MSU, said
the state
had faced the risk of catastrophic tobacco budworm
numbers for
several years because of high levels of
insecticide
resistance. "The
extremely high numbers in 1995 turned that risk
into reality,"
Layton said. "This risk will exist again next
year because
we still will have problems with insecticide
resistance.
Severe
winter temperatures will help reduce the danger." The
entomologist said because of the cyclic nature of
these insects
next year hopefully will be less severe. "We
seldom have two back-to-back years of insect
populations
at
these levels of a pest like this," he said. Layton
said natural predators and parasites increase
with high
numbers of an insect and help knock the numbers back
down. He
said the damage to the 1995 crop is done. Growers are
no longer
applying insecticides as the tobacco budworms prepare
to overwinter
in the ground. In
Forrest County, where cotton is a new crop, growers
are anxious
to harvest and see the bottom line. "We're
one of the few counties that haven't had
tobacco budworm
problems, but we've had everything else --
bollworms,
beet
armyworms, yellow-striped armyworms and even loopers,"
said Lee
Taylor, Forrest County agricultural agent. "Last
fall's eradication
efforts helped keep boll weevils from becoming
a factor
this year." Taylor
said growers turned to cotton as marketing
of soybeans
and corn became less attractive. He said 1995 has been
a good
year for cotton. Otis
Davis, Madison County agent, said growers
began harvesting
cotton slightly earlier because of the dry
conditions.
The
drought is causing lighter seeds and smaller
bolls. "Insects
were a tremendous expense to growers
throughout
Madison
County," Davis said. "Cotton prices probably will
entice growers
to return to cotton again next year." Growers
throughout the southeast continue to await word
on disaster
assistance from the federal and state governments as
a result
of tobacco budworm damage. Released:
Sept. 15, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Growers Picked
Tough Year for More Cotton
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty, (601) 325-2701; Dr. Blake Layton,
(601) 325-2085
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:19
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0915.html
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