Rice Growers Get Word On Preparing For Season
ST. MARTINVILLE, LA.
St. Martin Parish rice and soybeans producers heard preseason advice
from LSU AgCenter experts about preparing for this year’s crops.
LSU AgCenter weed scientist Eric Webster said rice farmers should be
getting their fields ready for planting by spraying for weeds now.
An aggressive approach now will provide a better seedbed. “Broaden
your herbicide spectrum with multiple modes of action,” he said.
Herbicide-resistant weeds – barnyardgrass in St. Landry Parish and
Palmer amaranth in Acadia Parish – have been found, Webster said. But he
suspects seeds from Palmer amaranth had become mixed with soybean
seeds.
LSU AgCenter rice specialist Johnny Saichuk said he found patches of
herbicide-resistant red rice in a field in Evangeline Parish, and he
recommended that the farmer to kill it with spot applications of
glyphosate, even though it killed some nearby rice.
Webster said the new Provisia herbicide for conventionally bred
herbicide-resistant rice probably will be available from BASF in 2017.
The corporation announced the product last week at the Rice Technical
Working Group meeting in New Orleans.
LSU AgCenter rice breeder Steve Linscombe said the Caffey
medium-grain rice variety awaits approval by the Kellogg Co. for its
line of rice products. “They are about 99.9 percent sure it will be
approved,” he said.
The Catahoula variety has proven to have good resistance to blast
disease, so its seed production was increased for this year, Linscombe
said. The Cocodrie variety, in existence for more than 15 years, remains
a widely used option for farmers.
Acreage is expected to decrease substantially for the Jazzman
varieties this year. He said Vietnamese aromatic varieties have taken
away some of the overseas markets where Jazzman has sold well.
Two new varieties grown for seed this year, medium-grain CL271 and
Clearfield Jazzman, will be ready for commercial production next year,
he said.
The check-off funds provided by farmers are an investment in the
future of farming, Linscombe said. “Your check-off dollars are extremely
critical in what we do for extension and research activities.”
LSU AgCenter economist Kurt Guidry said rice prices have been
creeping up the past few months because of decreased stockpiles.
Texas and California crops are expected to decline because of water
problems, but Arkansas is expected to grow more rice – as much as
100,000 to 400,000 acres over last year’s total of 1 million, he said.
Prices should be in the range of $22 to $25 a barrel.
Soybeans will be in the $11- to $12-a-bushel range. “Don’t wait for
$13 soybeans,” Guidry said. “I don’t think it’s going to happen this
year.”
LSU AgCenter soybean specialist Ron Levy said the window for planting groups III and IV soybeans is April 15 through May 10.
Levy said recent research he conducted has shown that burning soybean fields after harvest removes valuable nutrients.
Also, Levy said soybeans resistant to the herbicides dicamba and 2,4-D are expected to be released next year.
LSU AgCenter entomologist Sebe Brown said kudzu bugs were found last
year in four northeast Louisiana parishes, but they are not as bad of a
pest as redbanded stinkbugs.
Recent cold weather has not been severe enough to affect redbanded stinkbugs, he said.
The threshold for spraying the insects has been dropped, Brown said, to
four bugs out of 25 sweeps. The previous threshold was six out of 25
sweeps.
Farmers should control weeds along the edges of fields that hold
insects, he said. “By controlling your weeds, you will stop a lot of
your insect issues.”
LSU AgCenter plant pathologist Trey Price said most Cercospora disease
in soybeans is resistant to fungicides. Development of a variety
resistant to the disease would be a solution, but so far only tolerant
varieties are available.∆