Sept. 25, 2000
Eradication making strides throughout Western
High Plains, state
(ABILENE) — In the
midst of one of the worst droughts in Texas history, cotton growers
in the Western High Plains have at least one thing to celebrate — boll
weevil numbers have been drastically reduced.
The reductions mean
that one obstacle to producing a profitable crop is well on its way
to being eliminated.
The Western High Plains
Eradication Zone began its effort to eradicate the No. 1 cotton pest
from the area with a diapause program in late summer 1999.
Spring planting for
the 2000 growing season initiated the first full-season phase of the
eradication program. Foundation personnel placed traps around fields
at a greater concentration than the previous fall. The increased numbers
of traps allowed employees to monitor weevil activity in fields more
precisely and to make treatment decisions based on the information obtained.
An added benefit
of the increased number of traps is that they serve to help control
weevil numbers.
This change meant only
the portions of fields that showed sufficient weevil activity were treated.
As a normal part of the program, treatments were reduced in some areas
during midseason to aid in preserving beneficial insects that prey on
other cotton pests. With the threat of a beet armyworm outbreak, foundation
personnel took extra precautions to ensure eradication spraying would
not be a major contributor to the problem.
The result was that
entering the fall, the zone continues to show a marked reduction of
boll weevil numbers compared with last year. Through the end of the
second full week in September, weekly trap captures in the zone averaged
1.08 weevils per trap. At the same time last year, the week’s average
was slightly more than 12 weevils per trap.
Other zones in the
state are enjoying similar success. Four other zones began eradication
in 1999, the Northwest Plains, Permian Basin, Northern Rolling Plains
and El Paso/Tran Pecos, and all have seen reductions in weevil numbers
well in excess of 90 percent.
The Rolling Plains
Central zone, to the east of the Permian Basin, has seen greater than
a 99.9 percent reduction in weevil counts compared with 1996, and the
South Texas/Winter Garden zone has seen a reduction of about 93 percent
compared with 1996.
But the crowning accomplishment
of the eradication effort is in the Southern Rolling Plains, the area
surrounding San Angelo. This zone was declared functionally eradicated
on Sept. 20.
What can growers
in the Western High Plains expect in the future?
First, foundation personnel
will be aggressive in treating for weevils this fall. Fall insecticide
treatments will attempt to reduce the number of weevils that hibernate
for the winter, meaning fewer weevils will emerge to be dealt with in
the spring.
Next year will be much
like this year. Growers will again be encouraged to do all they can
to cooperate with the effort, especially in allowing foundation employees
to have access to all sides of their fields. This will enable them to
make the best decisions for treating fields, which in turn reduces the
cost of the program and the amount of insecticide introduced into the
environment.
Finally, with a little
cooperation from the weather, growers should note less damage to their
crops, lower control costs and increased yields — the goal of the eradication
effort.
