|
Sunbelt Ag News:
DOANE:
Cotton Commentary
Grain, Cotton, L'stock Updates
Grain news from STAT
Fruit and
Vegetables from STAT
More Ag News
|
Grain Futures Newswire
Sugar, U.S. Nut
Markets
|
Sorry, but you're only getting half the news we offer.
Click here
for our free cotton, rice, peanut and Southern grain reports, and
see the full picture. |
Upcoming Events:
(FD: field
day; SS: scout schools)
Texas Big Country Wheat
Conference, 8/19, 7 am, Big Country Hall at Taylor County Expo Center,
Abeline.
Texas
Dawson County Farm Tour, 8/20, 7:30 am, Dawson Co. Community Building,
Lamesa.
Arkansas: Cache River Valley Seed FD, 8/20, Cash.
Georgia Midville
FD Research Center Opening Ceremony, 8/20, 9 am, University of Georgia
Southeast REC, Midville.
Florida Marianna Peanut
FD, 8/21, 8 am, North Florida REC, Marianna.
Louisiana Dean
Lee Research and Extension FD, 8/21,
1:30 pm, Sandy Stewart for info,
Alexandria.
Missouri Rice FD, 8/27, Missouri Rice Research Farm.
Kansas
2008 FD, 8/28, 8:30, K-State Southwest REC, Garden City.
Missouri Delta Center FD, 9/2,
9 am, Lee Farm, Portageville.
Tennessee Cotton Research Tour and Wheat Production Conference, 9/3,
8:30 am, West Tennessee Research and Education Center, Jackson.
South Carolina Fall FD, 9/4, 9 am, Edisto REC,
Blackville.
Alabama
Precision Ag and Crops FD, 9/5, 9 am, Corcoran Farm, Eufaula.
Missouri
Field Day and Crop Tour, 9/9, 9 am, Delta Research Center, Lee Farm,
Rhone Hall.
Louisiana Jeff Davis Soybean, Fuel Crop and Wheat Demonstration Tour, 9/10,
Allen Hogan for info, Fenton.
North Carolina Cotton Field Day, 9/10, 12:30 pm registration, Upper
Coastal Plain Research Station, Rocky Mount.
Louisiana Wheat Production Meeting, 9/11, 8 am, Dewitt Livestock
Facility, LSUA Campus, Alexandria.
Virginia
Late-Season and Pre-Harvest Field Tour, 9/11, 2 pm, Tidewater REC Farm,
Suffolk.
Louisiana
Jeff Davis
Rice Growers Association Annual Meeting, 9/18, 7 pm,
Welsh
Firemen’s Association Hut,Welsh.
Mississippi
Cotton Crop Management Seminar and Workshops, 11/11-13, Grand
Casino and Resort, Tunica.
Beltwide Cotton Conference,
1/5-8, 2009. Marriott Rivercenter/Riverwalk Hotel, San Antonio, Texas.
National Conservation Systems Cotton & Rice Conference, 1/26-27, 2009,
Marksville, La.
To list an
event, contact Owen
Taylor
|
|
|
|
|
Kansas:
Gray Leaf Spot in Corn Near Epidemic Levels in Some Areas
By Mary Lou Peter-Blecha
K-State Agricultural Experiment Station
MANHATTAN, Kansas (July 18, 2008) - A potentially yield-robbing disease, gray leaf spot, has surfaced in east Kansas corn fields, heightening the need for producers to scout their acreage, a Kansas State University plant pathologist said. "Over the past 10 days, levels of gray leaf spot have exploded in many fields in the eastern half of the state," said Doug Jardine, plant pathology state leader with K-State Research and Extension. "Much of the corn in the west is just starting to reach the maturity stage when gray leaf spot needs to be monitored." Gray leaf spot is caused by the fungus Cercospora zeae-maydis.
Jardine said he scouted numerous corn fields in the western half of the Kansas River Valley (Manhattan to Rossville) the first week in July. Growth stages there ranged from tassels just emerging to pollen shed. "In nearly every field, gray leaf spot lesions could be found within one to three leaves of the ear leaf. In a couple of fields, lesions were already present above the ear leaf," Jardine said. "It is my understanding that fungicide applications have begun. Still, every field should be checked for gray leaf spot progress and development." Jardine surveyed southeast Kansas July 17-18 and found the corn there looks healthy, with little evidence of gray leaf spot. "Most of the corn in southeast Kansas is mature enough that gray leaf spot is likely not to be a problem for the remainder of the season," he said. If the forecast for continued humid weather and scattered thundershowers materializes in the rest of eastern Kansas however, the disease will continue to develop, he said. For fields where the disease is already above the ear leaf, producers should consider using a triazole or triazole-containing fungicide, such as Quilt ® , Stratego ® , Tilt ® , Bumper ® , or Propimax ®. In fields where the disease has made less progress, strobiluron fungicides such as Headline ® or Quadris ® can work well. "The most severe disease outbreaks will occur where susceptible hybrids are being grown in a corn-after-corn or no-till situation," the plant pathologist said. Producers can estimate returns that may come from applying a fungicide to a field with heavy gray leaf spot, Jardine said. With the following formula, for example, a grower might use these assumptions: Yield potential of 110 bushels per acre; fungicide application at a cost of $22 per acre; gray leaf spot at or above the ear leaf; and a selling price of $7 per bushel: 5 percent loss to disease = ~ $16 net return 10 percent loss to disease = ~ $53 net return 15 percent loss to disease = ~ $90 net return 20 percent loss to disease = ~ $129 net return Higher yields would result in higher net returns, Jardine added. Mention of a trade name in this article does not necessarily imply endorsement by Kansas State University.
|