Cotton growers
support boll weevil referendum
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- With zero boll weevils in 98 percent of
Mississippi's cotton fields, growers appear eager to
continue the eradication program that has brought them this
far.
Growers
in Mississippi's south Delta counties are the most recent to
agree to a 10-year program to continue eradication and
maintenance efforts at not more than $12 per acre annually.
This vote came just before the conclusion of five
consecutive years in the boll weevil eradication program.
The Farm Service Agency counted votes on July 25 for growers
in Region 2 of Mississippi's Boll Weevil Eradication
Program.
"We had
a valid referendum because more than 50 percent of the
eligible growers returned ballots and more than the required
66 percent voted in favor," said Jeannine Smith, executive
director of the Mississippi Boll Weevil Management Corp.
"Almost 72 percent of the growers in Region 2 (Mississippi's
south Delta counties) approved the program by about 71
percent."
Blake
Layton, cotton entomologist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the maintenance program
is important because of isolated hot spots of boll weevil
activity, even after the first five years of eradication
efforts.
"We
will always face the risk of weevils returning, so
maintenance in weevil-free areas is imperative," Layton
said.
Boll
Weevil Eradication Program data indicates that 22 counties
in Mississippi are boll weevil free. Statewide, 98 percent
of the state's cotton fields are free of the pest, which has
been considered cotton's No. 1 enemy since the early
1900s.
"History
teaches us that boll weevils move very quickly across
cotton-growing regions. Weevils entered the state in the
Natchez area in 1907, were in Corinth seven years later and
were completely across to Virginia by 1922," Layton said.
"Modern transportation greatly increases the potential for
boll weevil reinfestations to occur by carrying them stowed
away on vehicles moving from one region to
another."
Layton
said the best news for growers is that once involved in a
successful eradication program, they will not personally do
any spraying for or have any yield losses to weevils. In the
past, many growers could expect to lose 4 to 5 percent of
their cotton crop to weevils. Arrival of Bt cotton, which is
resistant to tobacco budworms, has helped reduce the use
(and cost) of foliar sprays even more.
Six
years ago, every cotton field in the state had to contend
with boll weevils. This year, every one of the state's 1.15
million cotton acres is involved in a five-year boll weevil
eradication effort or subsequent maintenance program. The
boll weevil eradication program began in Mississippi's
eastern counties in 1997 and has progressed to the west.
Regions 3 and 4 (the hill counties) completed their
five-year program in 2001 and entered the maintenance
program this year. Region 1 (north Delta) growers will
complete their five-year program next year.
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Writer:
Linda Breazeale
Released:
Aug. 5, 2002
Contact: Blake Layton, (662) 325-2960
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