By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's cotton was on the road to success in
early July until weather stress, insects and diseases forced
the crop to take a detour. Dr. Will
McCarty, cotton specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the August crops are a
far cry from the fields a month earlier. "I don't
know if I've ever seen a crop develop this fast and then
back up just as fast," McCarty said. "We had the motherload
of crops until hot, dry weather, insects and diseases took
their toll." McCarty
said thanks to timely rains in early July, some of
Mississippi's cotton looks good. The hotter-than-normal
temperatures have pushed the crop about 18 days ahead of
schedule, which should enable growers to harvest early.
Harvesting early improves market prices and helps avoid lost
quality due to fall rains. "Cotton
still has a chance to be the bright spot among Mississippi's
row crops, but with the drought's effect on soybeans and
corn and now the additional problem with aflatoxin in corn,
it won't take much for cotton to do better," McCarty
said. The
cotton specialist said plants have had significant problems
with fruit shed. Wilt diseases on various varieties also
have caused their share of damage. "Even
with the fruit shed and additional problems, a late fall and
good late-season growing conditions will help make this a
good crop for Mississippi growers," McCarty said. Dr.
Blake Layton, Extension entomology specialist, said
bollworms and tobacco budworms have not been kind to the
1998 cotton crop. The good news has been the lack of boll
weevils in Mississippi's hill cotton where boll weevil
eradication efforts are underway. Tobacco
budworm resistant Bt cotton has done its job minimizing
budworm damage, but bollworms have bit into Bt yields.
Layton said the state has experienced an increase in
bollworm numbers in recent years as the corn acreage has
grown. Non-Bt cotton fields have received significant damage
from bollworms and budworms. "North
Delta fields have had more boll weevils than normal, but
timely pin-head square applications have helped reduce
losses so far," Layton said. "However, many fields in this
area will need additional treatments to reduce late-season
populations." The time
has arrived to assault the last of the season's boll weevils
before they leave fields for overwintering sites. Organized
boll weevil eradication efforts began for South Delta fields
the first week of August. Released:
Aug. 7, 1998
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton Takes
Detour On Road To Success
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty, (601) 325-2701; Dr. Blake Layton
(601) 325-2085
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:29
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop98/cr980807.htm
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