By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A projected soybean increase of 200,000 acres is
pushing Mississippi's planted acreage up for 1997, despite
drops in cotton and corn. Mississippi
is expected to plant 3.9 million acres in the state's top
four crops -- soybeans, cotton, corn and rice -- compared to
3.76 million acres last year. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Planting Intentions Report,
released March 31, revealed few surprises. Rice was the only
other row crop expected to increase acreage in 1997, jumping
19 percent to 250,000 acres. Dr. Alan
Blaine, extension soybean specialist at Mississippi State
University, described the report as "interesting" because of
the unexplainable acreage change in the four
crops. "Where
is that extra 140,000 acres coming from? I'm not seeing that
much additional acreage out in the state," Blaine
said. Mississippi
soybean growers are expected to plant 2 million acres, an 11
percent increase from last year. "What we
are seeing is a short-term response to the Freedom to Farm
act. Growers are finally able to capitalize on a positive
practice (crop rotation) without being penalized by a
government program," Blaine said. "I hope the long-term
response is continuing the practice of crop
rotation." Dr. Tom
Jones, extension agricultural economist at MSU, said three
other factors contributed to the forecast for increased
soybean plantings. "Improving
bean prices, poorer corn prices and a disappearing planting
window for corn have inspired growers to plant more soybeans
in place of corn," Jones said. "Soybeans are about a dollar
ahead of last year's cash prices. Current prices are running
above $8 a bushel." On the
other hand, corn cash prices are about a dollar less,
currently around $3 a bushel. "Farmers
who grow state-average corn will still make money at these
prices," Jones said. The
report forecast Mississippi's 1997 corn crop at 550,000
acres, down 13 percent, but still higher than 1995's 300,000
acres. Higher
production costs are resulting in another expected decrease
in Mississippi's cotton crop. The report predicts 1.1
million acres in Mississippi, which is 360,000 acres down
from 1995. "That
1.1 million acres is a best-case scenario," said Dr. Will
McCarty, extension cotton specialist at MSU. "With the
Mississippi River and bean prices both high, the forecast
for cotton acreage is down." McCarty
said about 70,000 to 100,000 cotton acres have been
underwater near the river. Additional rains from Missouri
down to Mississippi could force cotton out of more
fields. "Because
of the bad economic situation in recent years, farmers have
been pulling back to their best land for cotton to get their
profit margins up," McCarty said. Released:
April 4, 1997
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Soybeans Nudge
State's Acreage
Contact: Dr. Tom Jones, (601) 325-2671; Dr. Alan Blaine,
(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/cr970404.htm
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