By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's cotton crop is off to a good start
this year with boll weevil treatments set to begin in early
June. Dr.
Blake Layton, entomologist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said cotton pin-head square
applications should begin the first week of June in some
places, but most of the crop will be treated the following
week. "The
treatment is scheduled for about the seventh true leaf
stage," Layton said. "The objective is to apply treatments
before any one-third grown squares are present in the field
because boll weevils can lay eggs in squares once they reach
this size." In
Mississippi's hill section which is involved in the boll
weevil eradication program, trapping more than two boll
weevils per 40-acre field will trigger the first
application. "Traps
will continue to be run after the first treatment, and a
second treatment will be applied if one or more boll weevils
are trapped in the same field within a seven day period,"
Layton said. Boll
weevil trap captures are unusually high in non-eradication
areas of the state, Layton said, but do not indicate true
boll weevil numbers. Dry weather through May kept many boll
weevils from emerging from over-wintering. "The
recent rainfall will likely create a flush of weevil numbers
in those areas," Layton said. The goal
in non-boll weevil eradication areas is the same as in the
rest of the state. "We need
to get the first pin-head square application before any
squares are one-third grown," Layton said. "It's very
important to get this application on time." In years
with low boll weevil populations, often one treatment is all
that is needed. This year's large population will probably
require a second treatment. "If
weevil populations continue to emerge, we will need a second
application about five to seven days following the first
treatment," Layton said. Dr. Will
McCarty, Extension cotton specialist, said despite boll
weevil considerations, this year's cotton crop looks good
across most of the state. "We're
off to one of our better, more uniform starts to cotton than
we've had in the last four to five years," McCarty said.
"The biggest concern recently was that cotton planted on
heavy clay fields would run out of moisture before a good
stand was established, but rain across most of the growing
area at the end of May supplied much of the needed
moisture." The lack
of rain early in the growing season led to weed problems in
some fields where water-activated pre-emergence herbicides
were not activated. Contributing
to the excellent start cotton has gotten across the state
was the above normal accumulation of heat units. The crop
has almost 250 more heat units than did last year's crop at
this time, McCarty said. Released:
May 29, 1998
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton Off To
Good Start Across State
Contact: Dr. Blake Layton, (601) 325-2085; Dr. Will McCarty,
(601) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:28
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop98/cr980529.htm
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