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From our October 26, 2000,
edition.
Boll
weevils on the run
MUNDAY
– Hot, dry weather conditions this year favored two boll weevil
eradication efforts under way on the Rolling Plains, said a Texas
Agricultural Extension Service entomologist.
“There
are two active boll weevil eradication programs on the Rolling Plains –
the Rolling Plains central zone and the Rolling Plains northern zone,”
said Emory Boring, Extension entomologist based at Texas A&M’s
Agricultural Research and Extension Center at Vernon. “Next year will be
a critical period in the central zone.
“Fewer
insecticide applications will be made there, and remaining boll weevil
infestations will be spotty. Most insecticide applications there will
occur from mid-June through mid-July and from mid-August through
September.
“But
trapping to gauge weevil numbers will continue at the same pace as this
year. By the end of 2001, the central zone will probably be pretty close
to their eradication goal.”
Boll
weevil numbers are low in the northern zone, which begins in Hardeman and
Foard counties and stretches east through Wilbarger, Wichita, Archer and
Clay counties, he noted.
“Most
irrigated cotton in the northern zone is located in Hardeman and Wichita
counties. This year’s drought helped raise weevil mortality there, and
lower September treatment thresholds have pushed weevil numbers well below
those in the western counties of this zone,” Boring said. “There is
little boll weevil migration from the north or south into this zone –
thanks to its isolation from weevil-infested counties further to the east,
and eradication programs in Oklahoma and the Rolling Plains central
zone.”
Boll
weevil migration has been a problem on the western side of the northern
zone – especially around Turkey, Texas, the entomologist said.
“Even
so, the addition of about 56,000 acres of cotton below the Caprock in
Motley, Dickens, Kent, Briscoe, Garza and Crosby counties should help
curtail weevil migration,” Boring said. “Producers and landowners in
these counties voted to become part of the Rolling Plains northern zone in
May. Diapause control applications started on this acreage in early
September.
“This
additional acreage establishes a well-defined boundary, and better
isolation, for the western part of the northern zone, and will help limit
weevil migration into the northwest part of the central zone.”
Trapping
will continue to be an important part of both zone’s eradication
programs.
“Workers
in both zones will again place boll weevil traps around fields, after
producers establish the 2001 cotton crop,” Boring said. “If there are
fields in your area without traps by the time cotton reaches the four-leaf
stage, contact the eradication program work unit in your county.
“Trapping,
and monitoring trap numbers, tells us when to make insecticide
applications. It’s very important that these applications are made where
over-wintered boll weevils are moving into young cotton. This keeps
weevils from depositing eggs in squares that are ¼-inch and larger. If
producers and landowners continue to work closely with their eradication
zone, we can lessen the cost and time necessary to achieve eradication on
the Rolling Plains.”
There
are eight active boll weevil eradication zones (programs) in Texas,
operated and governed by cooperative efforts between producers and the
Texas Boll Weevil Eradication Foundation. In late September, the Southern
Rolling Plains zone was the first to declare its counties (Coke, Coleman,
Concho, Irion, Mason, McCulloch, Runnels, Schleicher, Tom Green, and
southern Taylor) “weevil free.”
There
are three active boll weevil eradication zones on the High Plains.
Producers in two other High Plains zones will soon decide when, and at
what cost, to “activate” their eradication programs.
The
Texas Agricultural Extension Service estimates that boll weevils cost the
state somewhere between $25 million to $50 million annually, before
eradication programs were initiated.
Eradication
programs in regional zones are first approved by producers, and are funded
by a combination of farmer assessments and state monies.
More
information on the boll weevil eradication effort under way in Texas is
available by visiting the Texas Boll Weevil Eradication Foundation site (
http://www.txbollweevil.org).
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