By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Farmers across Mississippi are moving some of their
acres to cotton or soybeans based on poor prices and a bad
year for corn in 1998. Dr.
Erick Larson, corn specialist with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, said last year's problems with
aflatoxin have been the most significant factor keeping corn
acreage low this year. "Many
growers are uncomfortable dealing with the risk of aflatoxin
because it develops based primarily on environmental
conditions over which the grower has little control," Larson
said. Aflatoxin,
which results from a fungal disease, was worse last year
than it has been since 1977, Larson said. Aflatoxin is
possible in the South each year under certain environmental
conditions because the fungus is abundant in the
soil. "Producers
who haven't grown corn for many years are less comfortable
with the risk of aflatoxin occurring again this year,"
Larson said. The most
recent U.S. Department of Agriculture planting intentions
report showed farmers planting 320,000 acres of corn, down
from 550,000 in 1998. A wet planting season and poor prices
also helped drive acreage down. The
Extension Service suggested an April 10 planting cutoff date
for the area near Yazoo and Sharkey counties. The north
central cutoff date for the area around Noxubee, Monroe,
Bolivar and Washington counties is April 20, while farther
north has until April 25 to get the corn crop in. "The wet
spring conditions thus far have limited planting days,
delaying planting for many growers," Larson said. Dr. Tom
Jones, Extension agricultural economist, said corn that is
planted late has a better chance of facing drought stress
when the grains are filling. This leads to reduced corn
yields. "Soybeans
have a better tolerance for being planted later and with the
government programs available, soybeans look to many farmers
like a better crop than corn," Jones said. Dr. O.A.
Cleveland, Extension marketing specialist, said cotton is
also claiming some of the land originally intended for
corn. "Irrigated
land will tend to move to cotton and dryland acreage will
tend to move to a combination of beans and cotton,"
Cleveland said. The
dryland shift to beans will likely be caused by the limited
availability of bank credit, Cleveland said. Cotton is a
high risk crop, and being planted on dryland increases that
risk. However, if the crop is successful, the payoff is
greater for cotton than for soybeans. "Mississippi
is a cotton state and that is our competitive advantage.
Farmers, being optimists, look for a home run and plant
cotton because if the crop makes, it will pay bills when
grains and soybeans do not," Cleveland said. Released:
April 16, 1999
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Growers Debate
Planting Choices
Contact: Dr. Erick Larson, (601) 325-2311; Dr. O.A.
Cleveland, (601) 325-2516
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:31
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990416.htm
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