By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's cotton appears to be headed for an
above average crop in 1999 as insect pressures are low and
the weather is favorable for cotton production. Dr. Will
McCarty, cotton specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the overall crop looked
very good by mid-July. "At this
point, the crop has good moisture, vegetative growth, fruit
set and light insect pressure," McCarty said. "With still
months before harvest when anything can happen, the
potential of this year's cotton is definitely above
average." By July
11, about 97 percent of the crop was setting squares,
compared to 87 percent for the end of June. This maturity
level is slightly behind last year, but ahead of the
five-year average of 95 percent. The crop
is setting bolls on schedule, with 61 percent blooming,
compared to 55 percent for the 5-year average. Seventy-seven
percent of the crop is rated good or excellent and another
17 percent rated fair. Heat and
rain have served the cotton well so far this
season. "We are
still above average in heat unit accumulation, but below
last year which is good," McCarty said. "Last year was a
very hot year and cotton suffered some head
damage." Rains in
late June and early July were perfectly timed for the
cotton. Most fields across the state averaged 1.5 to 2
inches of rain, but isolated areas got more than 5
inches. "The
spread of maturity concerns me," McCarty said. "We had an
eight to 10 week planting season instead of four to five
weeks. However, good growing conditions have narrowed this
maturity spread." Dr. Mike
Williams, Extension entomologist, said the crop is under
very little insect pressure, although heavy rains flushed
some boll weevils from hibernation. "We
intensified some boll weevil eradication sprays during the
last few days based on trap numbers," Williams said. "Right
now, there's almost nothing going on in cotton in the way of
insects and we're looking real good. We're expecting a
bollworm moth flight because most of the corn has matured
and bollworms in the corn will probably come to the cotton
fields." Bollworms
can be treated with pyrethroids, which are less effective on
tobacco budworms. These insects require more expensive
insecticides. "With
heavy egg lay and developing larvae in conventional cotton,
we'll put out the more expensive materials insuring control
of both insects. It's very difficult to know which one is
infesting the field," Williams said. Aphid
populations are dropping, thanks to an earlier-than-usual
onslaught of a naturally-occurring fungus. This fungus kills
aphids and usually appears around July 10 to 12, but this
year it surfaced around July 4. "Observations
made on July 8 indicate that aphid populations have crashed
in the fields we visited," Williams said. White
fly populations are building in areas, but overall insect
pressures on cotton are low this year and farmers are
expecting a good crop. Released:
July 16, 1999
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Cotton Is On
Track For Good 1999 Year
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty, (662) 325-2311; Dr. Mike
Williams, (662) 325-2085
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:31
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990716.htm
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