By
Linda Breazeale STARKVILLE
-- Late season cotton yield estimates
have plummeted
as drought and insect damage effects become
apparent. From
the original yield estimate on Aug. 1 to the
recently
released
Oct. 1 figures, Mississippi's harvest estimate
has dropped
660,000 bales -- for a loss of hundreds of millions
of dollars
to the state's economy. "If you
assume about $350 per bale or 70 cents per pound
of lint
and about $40 per bale for the seed, then the loss is
in excess
of $250 million," said DeWitt Caillavet,
agricultural
economist
at Mississippi State University. "When the multipliereffect
is considered, the loss is around $682 million." Caillavet
said the first estimate of 2.49 million bales
for 1995
was based on conditions in July, when the crop was
looking better
than the 1994 crop of 2.132 million bales. Then
drought conditions
and tobacco budworms took control of the crop. Delta
counties, relatively unhurt by insect damage, were
hit hardest
by the late season drought after missing the early
August rains
of Hurricane Erin. Hill counties, most of which got
the Erin
rains but still struggled through the hot, dry weeks,
were devastated
by tobacco budworms. Some
people have linked the high tobacco budworm numbers
to the
fact that this is the first year of the boll
weevil eradication
program on the eastern side of the state.
Initial eradication
efforts reduce beneficial insects as well as
boll weevils. Dr.
Blake Layton, extension entomologist at MSU,
said eradication
efforts may have contributed to the tobacco
budworm problem,
but they were not the cause. "In
June we had substantially higher than normal
tobacco budworm
numbers both inside and outside the eradication
area," Layton
said. "This suggests that the problem didn't build up
in the
eradication area and move out to other counties." Layton
said the June populations were more severe
than normally
seen in the hill area and egg lay continued over
a longer
period of time -- three weeks instead of one.
Heavy tobacco
budworm damage occurred throughout much of the
450,000 acres
of Mississippi's hill cotton. Only 100,000 acres of this
is in
active boll weevil eradication. "The
distribution of the problem more closely follows
the hill/Delta
boundary than it does the eradication boundary.
This suggests
that environmental factors played the major role in
this year's
outbreaks," Layton said. The
entomologist said malathion treatments applied as
part of
the eradication effort aggravated the problem by
destroying
beneficial
insects that helped control tobacco budworm.
However,
hill
area growers outside the eradication area also had to
deal with
higher than normal boll weevil populations this season
and treat
more than usual with other insecticides that also
destroy beneficial
insects. Layton
said similar tobacco budworm damage occurred in
other southeastern
states, some in eradication areas and some
not involved
in active eradication efforts. "Cotton
growers don't need to let this bad year deter
them from
achieving boll weevil eradication in Mississippi,"
Layton said.
"As long as we have boll weevils to deal with, there
will be
a greater risk of problems such as this year occurring.
New products
being developed and new cotton varieties that will
help control
tobacco budworms give growers hope for future
years." Layton
said the cause of all insect problems being
more severe
in 1995 probably can be attributed to a mild
winter. "We had
much higher populations of other cotton pests,
and they
arrived much earlier in the season," Layton said. Released:
Oct. 13, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton Growers
Look for Yield Scapegoat
Contact: Dr. Blake Layton,
(601)
325-8571; DeWitt Caillavet,
(601)
325-5190
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:19
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop1013.html
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