By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's cotton growers haven't
closed
their books on the 1996 crop, but insects clearly will
not be
the negative factors they were last year. Many
growers' books went in the red during 1995's tobacco
budworm
invasion prompting Mississippi growers to plant about
28 percent
fewer cotton acres in 1996. Dr.
Blake Layton, extension entomologist at Mississippi
State
University, said insect costs in the state's hill area
will be
about half the 1995 levels. Delta growers may be looking
at two-thirds
of last year's control costs. Layton
said Delta growers averaged $76 an acre, and hill
growers
spent about $118 an acre in 1995. That was the first
year hill
farmers spent more on insect control than Delta
growers. "Insect
populations ebb and flow; 1996 was an ebb year,"
Layton
said. "Tobacco budworms were present, but they weren't
as healthy
and were fewer in number than last year. Therefore,
growers
didn't have to treat fields as much." Commercial
availability of Bt cotton, a genetically
engineered
variety which provides some resistance to tobacco
budworms
and bollworms, helped some growers this year. Layton
said about
42 percent of the state's cotton acreage was Bt
cotton. "Undoubtedly,
the Bt acres had an impact on budworm numbers
by
creating a dilution effect," Layton said. "Growers
inherently know
where their worst tobacco budworm fields are, so
that's where
they planted Bt." Dr.
Will McCarty, extension cotton specialist at MSU,
said Bt
yields are variable. "In
some places, Bt fields had higher yields, and in
other fields,
non-Bt cotton produced better," McCarty said. Layton
said Bt cotton is more resistant to tobacco budworms
than
bollworms, and some fields still needed spraying for
bollworms. "Growers
sprayed about half the Bt acreage at least once for
bollworms,"
Layton said. "Because of the overall reduced
spraying,
Bt cotton has increased the need to treat boll
weevils and
tarnished plant bugs." Last
fall, boll weevil eradication efforts in the state's
eastern
counties enabled growers to enter winter with a
smaller population.
Severe cold in parts of the state helped reduce
weevil
numbers even more. "Boll
weevil numbers have returned, and we are entering
winter
with high populations," Layton said. "Growers won't
get the
maximum benefit from Bt cotton until they eradicate the
boll weevil." McCarty
said Midsouth cotton acreage will continue to
decrease
in non-boll weevil eradicated states. "If the
cost of insecticides and licensing fees for Bt
cotton
remain the same, acreage will come down in
Mississippi," McCarty
said. Layton
said the jury is still out on the cost difference for
growers
who paid the licensing fees for Bt cotton to reduce
tobacco
budworms and bollworms versus those who controlled
with insecticides. "If we
had budworm numbers like last year, Bt growers
definitely
would have had an advantage," Layton said.
"Unfortunately,
insect populations are very unpredictable." Contact:
Dr. Blake Layton
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton growers
see lower insect costs
Released: Nov. 1, 1996 (601) 325-2960
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:23
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop96/cr110196.html
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