“These volunteer cotton crops are now popping up everywhere,” Rock said. “We’ve seen them along roadsides, in irrigation ditches, even in residential lawns and flowerbeds. It’s important that everybody pitch in to get rid of them.” Dolly’s strong winds and heavy rains in late July destroyed most of what was left of the 2008 cotton crop, already battered by drought then by heavy rains. But in the process, Rock said, she also scattered lint and seeds far and wide.
“We’re still calculating damage estimates for the 2008 cotton crop,” he said, “but we’re also concerned about what boll weevils could do to the 2009 crop now that they have plenty of volunteer crops in which to feed and reproduce.” State law mandates that cotton growers destroy any remnants of cotton stalks by Sept. 1 so as to remove over-wintering sites for boll weevils.
Several agencies, including AgriLife Extension, Texas Department of Agriculture and the Boll Weevil Eradication Foundation are working with growers to implement an integrated pest management approach to prevent a boll weevil population explosion in 2009, Rock said. But with so many volunteer plants now sprouting outside commercial cotton fields, control will be difficult at best…..
Volunteer cotton plants sprout from Hurricane Dolly wind-tossed seeds that now threaten the 2009 Rio Grande Valley cotton crop. Photo courtesy of Texas A&M
4 comments:
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