By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi soybean growers are going into harvest
hoping to survive a year of bad yields made worse by bad
prices. Early in
the growing season, high temperatures and drought were the
crop's worst enemies. Non-irrigated and early maturing Group
IV soybeans were hardest hit. As harvest neared, prices
fell, compounding the disastrous effects of low
yields. Yields
have averaged 25 to 27 bushels an acre, compared to 1997's
average of 31 bushels. Prices are currently about $5.30 per
bushel, rather than a normal price of $6.80. Dr. Alan
Blaine, Mississippi State University Extension agronomist,
said by mid-September, about 20 percent of Mississippi's
crop had been harvested. "You
can't make a crop on no rain and the kind of heat we had.
This is the toughest crop we've had since 1980," Blaine
said. "With few exceptions, we have a better crop than we
should have considering the extremes we've
experienced." Blaine
said in the 1980s, Mississippi would have had statewide
average yields of 16 to 18 bushels an acre in a year like
this. This year's yield is expected to be higher because of
different farming practices such as early planting, early
maturing varieties, improved irrigation schedules and better
varieties. About 400,000 of the state's 2 million soybean
acres are irrigated, Blaine said. Ed
Hester of Benoit farms 2,200 acres of soybeans in Bolivar
and Washington counties. He raises Group V beans, but said
growers in his area harvesting Group IV soybeans are
averaging 17 bushels an acre on non-irrigated
land. "I
haven't heard many good yield reports," Hester said. "Some
are harvesting as little as 3 to 7 bushels per acre on
non-irrigated Group IV soybeans. Hopefully that's the worst,
but the rest remains to be seen." About 60
percent of Hester's acreage is irrigated, but he said he
anticipates his harvest to be much lower than last year when
he averaged 36 bushels an acre. "My
soybeans go from the 7 bushel range to hopefully much
better," Hester said. "The ones we irrigated will be fairly
good beans, but I probably could save money by not
harvesting the ones that had no irrigation." With
prices as low as they are, many growers will not break even
on much of their acreage. Dr. John Robinson, Extension ag
economist, said a 5 bushel per acre yield would require
prices of $32.60 per bushel to break even. A 25 bushel yield
breaks even at $6.52 per bushel, while those harvesting 40
bushels per acre break even at $4.08 a bushel. Dr.
David Shaw, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station weed scientist, said yields this year were hurt by
droughts in June and August and extremely high temperatures
throughout the growing season. Rain in
early August was a mixed blessing to soybean growers. Most
of the Delta received between 1 and 3.5 inches of
rain. "The
rain came just right for some people, a little later for
others and is just getting in the way for those who are
harvesting," Shaw said. "Later maturing plants may not be
hurt as badly because of the rain we've gotten, but we've
had enough dry weather that their yields will be affected
some." Released:
Sept. 18, 1998
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Low Prices,
Yields Hurt Soybean Crop
Contact: Dr. Alan Blaine or Dr. David Shaw, (601)
325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:29
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop98/cr980918.htm
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