By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Some Mississippi soybean growers are looking at
excellent yields; others, who fell victim to unseasonably
cool, wet conditions at planting time, never had a
chance. Mack
Young, Quitman County agricultural agent, said this year's
crop is divided into early, middle and late crop
beans. "Yields
on the earliest planted beans are looking really good. With
at least half the Group IV's harvested, yields are running
from the mid-30s to the 60-bushel-per-acre range," Young
said. Young
said the middle crop of beans will produce "decent yields,"
between 30 and 40 bushels per acre. "Unfortunately,
about 20 percent of the Quitman County crop was planted
after July 1, which is very late," Young said. "Dry weather
has hit, and these beans need a rain soon or they will be
doomed to some very low yields, probably in the 10 to 15
bushel range." Eddie
Harris, extension area soybean agent in Humphreys County,
said the cool, wet conditions early resulted in some
replanting. Seeds that were not pretreated with a fungicide
were prone to pythium, a seedling disease. "Farmers
probably will be more likely to pretreat seed next year. The
seed treatment is a lot cheaper than replanting," Harris
said. Dr.
David Shaw, a soybean researcher at Mississippi State
University, said yields are good across the state, except
for Northeast Mississippi where farmers had to replant two
or three times, resulting in planting much later than
ideal. "Pythium
affects the root systems and kills the seedlings or weakens
the plants," Shaw said. "With poor root systems, plants
showed more stress during drought-like
conditions." Shaw
said plants have been blooming and setting pods -- critical
stages for needing water -- during a late-season dry
spell. Monroe
County agent David Roberts said growers are facing a late
season dry spell and insect pressure. "At
best, we're looking at a poor soybean crop this year. If
fields don't get rain soon, it'll be a disaster," Roberts
said. "About 40 percent of the crop is in late beans and
they are at the pod setting and filling stage. Rain now is
critical." Released:
Sept. 19, 1997
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Soybeans Yield
Mixed Bag For 1997 Growers
Contact: David Shaw, (601) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:36
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop97/970919cr.htm
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