graphic version rss
LSUAgCenter.com
innovate, educate, improve lives
Home | Events | About Us | Our Offices |
Search: [Go]
Topics
Lawn & Garden
Family & Home
Crops & Livestock
Money & Business
Community
Food & Health
Environment &
Natural Resources
Kids & Teens

 more...>Louisiana Agriculture Magazine>Past Issues>2003>Spring>

[image: ]

Printable Version

ON THE COVER

LSU AgCenter scientists are experimenting with technology that will make it possible for aerial applicators to spray precisely what’s needed over every square foot of a field. This will be good for the aerial applicator business as well as for farmers. See article "Precision Agriculture Aids Cotton Pest Management." Photo by John Wozniak.

in this issue


[Image: Sandy Stewart]Cotton Defoliation: The Science of the Art
Cotton defoliation, a critical step in cotton production, is the process of removing leaves and preparing the crop for mechanical harvest. Leaf removal facilitates harvest and allows for more efficient and faster picker operation, quicker drying of seedcotton, straightening of lodged plants, retardation of boll rot and faster opening of green bolls.
Effect of Soil-applied Insecticides on Tarnished Plant Bugs
Tarnished plant bugs, which have historically been a mid-season pest of cotton, are now becoming a sporadic pest during seedling development. This is happening as agricultural conditions are changing, making it possible for more tarnished plant bugs to survive. These changes include more plant hosts because of more acres going into conservation reserve programs and an increase in conservation tillage.
[Image: Gene Burris]Field Day at Northeast Research Station
Gene Burris (standing in striped shirt), a professor at the LSU AgCenter’s Northeast Research Station at St. Joseph, La., explains to farmers gathered for a field day about the research he is conducting to determine how to use technology to better control nematodes.
News Briefs
News briefs covering a range of topics including personal digital assistants as research tools, Nematode-tolerant cotton and endowed professors.
[Image: Cover Page]Louisiana Agriculture Magazine Spring 2003
Vol. 46, No. 2
Tillage and Cover Crop Effects on Herbicide Degradation
Management systems that include reduced tillage and cover crops are gaining popularity. These practices typically increase plant residues at the soil surface and organic matter in the surface soil. In turn, microbial activity is increased, and the soil develops a greater capacity to adsorb and retain many types of farm chemicals, including herbicides.
[Image: Cotton Aphids on Leaf]Fungus Helps Control Louisiana Cotton Aphids
The cotton aphid is a common secondary pest of cotton in Louisiana. Cotton aphids can infest cotton plants from seedling emergence until harvest and injure plants by continuously feeding on them. Injury symptoms may include a downward cupping of infested leaves, inter-veinal discoloration, compressed main stem nodes and reduced plant height.
1 2 3 4