By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Another month closer to closing the books on the
1996 crops and farmers are starting to breathe
easier. The
U.S. Department of Agriculture recently released the Sept. 1
crop production forecast which yielded few significant
changes from the August report. The similarity in the two
reports was a pleasant change from last year, when a late
drought and insects sent yield estimates
plummeting. Dr. Tom
Jones, extension agricultural economist at Mississippi State
University, said the national corn yield estimate increased
by 1.5 bushels an acre from the August figures. "These
Sept. 1 figures don't take into consideration any losses in
North Carolina and Virginia from Hurricane Fran," Jones
said. "The losses to the national corn crop could be offset
by the benefit Fran brought the eastern Corn Belt in the
form of much-needed rains." Mississippi's
corn harvest is running around 93 bushels per acre.
Mississippi has about 610,000 acres of corn, a 122 percent
increase over last year's 300,000 acres. About 5 percent of
the state's corn is grown for silage. Dr.
John Robinson, extension agricultural economist at MSU, said
Mississippi's major crops are showing much more potential
this year than they did in 1995. "Cotton
and soybean yields were much lower in 1995 because of dry
weather and insect problems," Robinson said. "In response to
last year's poor cotton crop and flexibility provisions in
the new Farm Bill, Mississippi growers planted less cotton
and considerably more corn." Robinson
said Mississippi cotton production is expected to decline 8
percent and rice, 20 percent, due to a decrease in planted
acreage. On the
other side of the fence, experts forecast Mississippi's corn
production to increase 117 percent from 26 million
bushels in 1995 to 57 million bushels in 1996. "The
production of wheat and soybeans is expected to increase 68
percent and 25 percent, respectively, above the previous
year," Robinson said. Robinson
said growers are seeing relatively good prices for the 1996
crops. "Feed
and food grain prices are considerably higher in 1996,
creating the potential for greater farm income from these
crops," Robinson said. "For example, a comparison of June
cash prices between 1995 and 1996 shows a 67 percent
increase for corn, a 31 percent increase for soybeans, a 39
percent increase for wheat and a 27 percent increase for
rice." Released:
Sept. 13, 1996
Mississippi
Crop Report:
USDA report
confirms 1996 crop successes
Contact: Dr. John Robinson (601) 325-2750
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:22
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop96/cr091396.html
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