Sunday, November 14, 2010

Cotton Consutlants, Mother Nature And The Danger Of Sweeping Generalizations

Cotton consulting has not gotten easier with the advent of Bt and Roundup Ready varieties.

Quite the contrary. It's become more of a challenge.

Dealer reps and Extension scouts who regularly work in cotton say the same thing. For every solution, there is a problem.

Here's how that's worked with cotton insects:

  • The shift to Bt cotton caused a corresponding shift in the insect complex.

  • Pests once considered minor became significant problems.

  • And in many cases, the newer pests are harder to scout or they complicate treatment decisions due to move away from broad-spectrum materials and/or insecticide resistance issues.
Through the years, we've conducted several consultant surveys, asking about business practices and in-field scouting methods. As early as 2004, we asked if cotton scouting was easier, harder or about the same in Bt cotton compared to conventional varieties. The response was heavily weighted toward harder. Also, consultants overwhelmingly indicated that it took more time to scout transgenic fields.

All of that was before most people recognized the coming of Roundup-resistant weeds, notably Palmer pigweed and marestail. Plenty of consultants who started their careers as insects scouts are now dealing with weed management issues. And for whatever reason, more leaf spot diseases are hitting cotton in parts of the South, adding one more hot spot of concern to the consultant's check list.

Some people predicted that Bt cotton would, in fact, make cotton consultants an endangered species. I heard that more in the Southeast than the Delta, perhaps. And demand for consultants fell off for several years. Between Bt varieties and declining cotton acres, many practitioners either left the business or learned to scout other crops, particularly grains.

One veteran Extension worker told me halfway through the last decade that in a few years there really would be no need for cotton consultants due to the near-universal acceptance of Bt cotton. With more research, he reasoned that pests like plant bugs and aphids could be managed with treatments timed according to degree-day accumulations.

He was dead wrong. Nature is always trying to fill empty spaces, which means that somebody needs to be checking.

I've been around long enough to have heard those sames kinds of sweeping generalizations about other new technologies.
  • In the 1980s, a few weed scientists said, half jokingly, that Johnsongrass might soon be on the verge of extinction with the introduction of that era's over-the-top grass herbicides. It didn't happen.
  • The same goes for Roundup Ready. Monsanto positioned it as a super herbicide, only to find that nature positioned a super weed against it, meaning pigweed. The handful of Extension specialists promoting resistance management were faint voices in the wilderness.
All this came to mind today as I read Roger Carter's weekly e-letter.

Carter, whose consulting firm operates in east-central Louisiana, discusses how pest spectrums have changed and what that has meant to the way consultants must now scout cotton.

Here's a link to Roger's comments.

They're well worth reading if you are a consultant, you pay one to check your crops or you're considering it.

But they're particularly important for any farmer who doesn't intend to use a consultant, dealer fieldman or Extension scout to check his cotton in 2011. The natural order of things keeps changing. If higher cotton prices are luring you back to the crop after dropping it for several years, forget most of what you remember from the last time you picked a bale of cotton. Depending on where you are, the insects may have a new game plan.

Read Carter's comments and remember that nature is always sneaking up on you.


- Owen Taylor

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:14 AM

    I have read those comments previous to you releasing this and your thoughts here reiterate my thoughts exactly after I read Rogers comments. While several consultants are no longer here, Bt cotton had very little to do with it, it was a reluctance to change business strategy that got most...ie just being a bug man and primarily exposed to just the cotton business. Those that lost their livelihood in the cotton business were more than likely those that were in areas where cotton disappeared because of commodity prices rather than Bt cotton selecting us out. I am as busy as I have ever been, as well as a lot of my close consultant friends. In my opinion without Bt cotton most all of us would have lost our jobs, and farmers could not have made it in the cotton business; in other words Bt cotton created jobs! Good article Owen, thanks for the support.

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  2. Anonymous9:42 PM

    I submit that the most significant impact on cotton pest management and the consultant's role in cotton today has not been boll weevil eradication and Bt cotton, but our reluctance to register any technology that has a broad spectrum of activity. We can no longer expect to register an insecticide that will control multiple pest species and this complicates the consultant's job in cotton. Broad spectrum insecticides generally kill beneficial insects and aquatic invertebrates when exposed. We now choose not to take these risks with new insecticides. Unlike other row crops, we more often than not have to deal with multiple species at the same time in cotton. These newer materials are more expensive because they have more limited use, thus more limited opportunities to sell them. Bt cotton is a great tool but it is limited in it's spectrum of activity, just as the newer insecticides are. Roger Carter is right on with his comments regarding the consultant's job today, but it has little to do with Bt cotton specifically, but more to do with the direction our society has chosen - which is to register only those materials that have a very narrow spectrum of activity. With or without Bt cotton, the consultants job has become more complicated today and requires much more training than in the past when a few broad spectrum materials controlled all of the pests.

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  3. Anonymous8:26 PM

    Would be nice to see articles written which include facts and not personal opinions. So many extension specialists and so called cotton experts, spend much of their time listening to other people and then forming opinions but basing it on nothing but "others" opinions. So many times these folks have a limited group of people they talk with and then have a very limited perspective, yet make statements as if it is widespread...for example BT tolerance or failure of technologies. Why don't they spend time getting the facts and not just rumors. Isn't that what they are paid for?

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  4. SESchutz8:46 PM

    what we have to keep remembering are two things...(1) Mother Nature is smarter than us
    (2) there is no such thing as an empty niche...

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