By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Most cotton growers haven't planted the first seed,
but they are already making decisions for managing
insects. Continued
poor market prices, a mild winter and location in the state
are among the issues growers are considering as they make
choices between transgenic cotton that is resistant to
budworms and nontransgenic seeds. Timely plantings for an
early maturing crop continues to be another part of the
insect risk management strategy. Dr.
Blake Layton, Extension cotton entomologist at Mississippi
State University, said as boll weevil eradication efforts
progress across the state, some regions will face higher
risks of tobacco budworm and beet armyworm
outbreaks. "The
potential of flaring secondary pests is greater in the
second and third years of the boll weevil eradication
program. The hill section of the state is essentially
through the most volatile year, but it is not time for
growers to let their guard down," Layton said. "This will be
the highest risk year for the South Delta, but much less
critical for the North Delta, where eradication efforts
won't begin until the first week of August." Layton
said areas involved in the eradication program tend to
experience fewer plantbugs, cotton's No. 3 pests, behind
boll weevils and budworms. However, those areas have a
greater tendency toward aphids and whiteflies, in addition
to budworms and armyworms. "Cotton
growers have many more weapons in their arsenals for
controlling pests than they did years ago. In addition to
transgenic cotton, Tracer has been available in recent years
to control budworms on nontransgenic varieties and some
other products may be available under (provisional status)
Section 18," Layton said. Furidan
is one of the products for treating aphids that growers have
been able to use in recent years under Section 18.
Additional labeled products are also effective in aphid
control. Layton
said he anticipates reduced malathion sprays in the hill
section cotton, known as Regions III and IV, because
eradication efforts have been ongoing since the fall of
1997. Layton said applications will be triggered by boll
weevil trap captures. The
South Delta, known as Region II, will also receive malathion
treatments based on trap captures, but Layton expects
greater boll weevil numbers in that region because
eradication efforts only started there last fall. Dr. Mike
Williams, Extension entomologist at MSU, said growers in
Regions III and IV had significant insect control costs last
year, largely due to the eradication program. "But
when the eradication effort is completed, cotton growers in
the hills will spend about half of their former insect
control costs," Williams said. In 1998,
Delta growers who were not involved in the eradication
program spent $17.60 per acre to control boll weevils and
lost $16.97 per acre in yields, for a total lost of $34.57
per acre. Control costs in the eradication program in the
hills were about $22 per acre, with no yield losses to
weevils. Williams
said the combined losses and costs of controlling budworms
and boll worms in the non-eradication area was about $73 per
acre and about $75 in the eradication zone. The
farming economy is going to make farmers weigh future insect
control choices very carefully. "We need
to help farmers find a happy medium between the desire to
spray at the first sign of pests to protect their yields and
the opposite reaction of delaying because they don't think
they can afford to spray with the market prices so low,"
Williams said. "We are trying to help growers recognize the
economic thresholds for making their decisions." Released:
April 9, 1999
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton Growers
Consider Insect Risk Management
Contact: Dr. Blake Layton, (601) 325-2960 or Dr. Mike
Williams, (601) 325-2986
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:30
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990409.htm
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