Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Lab Confirms Anthrax Case

COLLEGE STATION – Sample tissue submitted to the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory has tested positive for anthrax in a Central Texas beef cattle herd, according to agency officials.  The Texas Animal Health Commission confirmed the anthrax case on a ranch in  Hill County near Whitney, 30 miles north of Waco. A veterinarian submitted the tissue samples to the diagnostic laboratory in College Station.

“It’s not unheard of, but somewhat unusual (for anthrax to be discovered in Central Texas),” said Dr. Amy Swinford, head of diagnostic bacteriology for the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory.

The laboratory conducted a series of tests to confirm the identity of the bacteria isolated from the cow’s spleen, Swinford said.

“While the organism can be cultured from infected tissues, the preferred specimen is a blood sample, which can be collected without opening the carcass and potentially contaminating the surrounding soil,” she said.

Over the years, the laboratory has confirmed cases of anthrax as early as March and as late as December, although the disease typically is discovered during summertime in the state, according to Swinford. Most recent cases have been primarily in Southwest Texas, which is the endemic area for anthrax in the state.

Animals will be restricted from movement and vaccinated, according to animal health officials.

The anthrax spores live in the soil and can continue to be a threat to livestock if not vaccinated, Swinford said. Recent dry, warm weather likely created a favorable environment for the spores to form.

“Also, when you have a heavy rain, spores that may have been deep within the soil can float to the surface,” Swinford said. “They are then more easily ingested by livestock as animals graze the forage; the spores enter into their systems, germinate and cause disease.”

“I give credit to great people here in this laboratory,” she said. “Myself and my three senior technicians are on call to do this diagnostic work. Upon diagnosis of a reportable disease (such as anthrax), we notify TVMDL directors immediately, who in turn notify state health and Texas Animal Health Commission directors.”

“This is another example of the laboratory providing early detection on diseases of high consequence and providing services to protect our livestock industry,” said Dr. Tammy Beckham, Texas Veterinary Diagnostic Medical Laboratory director.

“We work closely with the industries and veterinarians across the state to provide timely, accurate diagnosis. In the case of infectious diseases such as anthrax, the time to diagnosis is critical for control and containment. Our staff is among the elite in their field and as such, works diligently to protect the agricultural, companion animal and public health sectors of Texas and the nation."

For more information on anthrax or the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory, visit http://tvmdl.tamu.edu/ . Information about anthrax is also available on the Texas Animal Health Commission’s website at http://www.tahc.state.tx.us or call 800-550-8242.

Scotts MiracleGrow Research Facility

COLLEGE  STATION – Groundbreaking for the new ScottsMiracle-Gro Lawn and Garden  Research Facility at Texas A&M University is scheduled for 10 a.m  Feb. 25 at 2891 F&B Road in College Station.
The  new facility is part of a long-term agreement among Texas A&M  AgriLife, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Texas A&M  and ScottsMiracle-Gro.

Scotts  is providing a total of $750,000 over five years to create the Scotts Lawn and Garden Research Facility through the Texas A&M Foundation. A separate research agreement will provide a minimum of $165,000 in  research funding per year for the next three years.

The  new facility will be located at the new Urban Ecology Field Laboratory on the Texas A&M campus. Scientists and specialists with Texas  AgriLife Research and the Texas AgriLife Extension Service – both Texas  A&M University System components – will utilize the facilities for  major research activities and teaching efforts. The  research facility will include buildings for equipment resources, plant  protectants and nutrients, educational and meeting spaces, faculty and  student offices, and a research laboratory.

What: Groundbreaking for ScottsMiracle-Gro Lawn and Garden Research Facility.

When: 10 a.m., Feb. 25.

Where: 2891 F&B Road in College Station

Scheduled speakers:  Dr. Mark Hussey, vice chancellor for the College of Agriculture and  Life Sciences at Texas A&M; Dr. David Baltensperger, head of the  Department of Soil and Crop Sciences at Texas A&M; Dr. Richard  White, professor of turfgrass management at Texas A&M and AgriLife  Research scientist; Jim Tates, ScottsMiracle-Gro southwest region  president; and Bruce Caldwell, ScottsMiracle-Gro Lawns technology leader.

More info: Related news release can be found at http://agrilife.org/today/2010/10/21/agrilife-scotts-partnership/ .

Wheat Update -- March 26, 2011

Most area wheat plants are at Feekes 8 (beginning of flag leaf emergence) to Feekes 9 (flag leaf fully emerged) . We found stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis) on March 14 in Patton SRWW, a variety we use for fungicide testing that is highly susceptible to stripe rust. The most commonly planted commercial varieties planted in this region (Coker 9553, USG 3295, USG 3555, AgriPro Magnolia, Terral LA 841, and Pioneer 25R47) show no evidence of stripe rust infection at this time.

Leaf rust (Puccinia recondita) was found on the lower leaves in Jackpot HRWW on March 21. It has not been observed in any of the other varieties in our trials. It is a later occurring disease than stripe rust, and does not usually appear in this region until Feekes 9 (flag leaf fully emerged) or Feekes 10 (boot to heading).

Barley yellow dwarf (BYD) is showing up in some area wheat fields. It is a virus disease that is transmitted by greenbugs (Schizaphis graminum) and bird cherry oat aphids (Rhopalosiphum padi). Symptoms are yellowing of the tips of the leaves and stunting of the plants, and it usually occurs in spots in the field. Severity of this disease is dependent on the time of infection. Fall infections are more damaging than spring infections, and are more likely to cause more stunting, reduced seed set, and lower bushel weights. Some varieties are more susceptible to this disease than others. There is nothing that can be done at this point. Treating the seed prior to planting with Gaucho® or Cruiser® to control aphids will help minimize the effects of the disease by reducing fall infections.

The Foliar Fungicide Decision
A number of factors are usually considered in making a fungicide spray decision, including yield potential, wheat price, fungicide cost, and disease pressure. This year, two of those factors make the decision much easier: $8.00 wheat and $4.00 per acre tebuconazole. A producer only needs one more bushel of wheat to cover the cost of the fungicide and application.

Tebuconazole (sold as TebuStar, Monsoon, Onset and others) was synthesized by Bayer Chemical Company around 30 years ago and tested under the trade name Folicur®, but it did not receive a federal label for wheat until 2009. It is a triazole with both curative and protective properties on the rusts (both leaf and stripe), and glume blotch (Stagnospora nodorum). We have evaluated this product in almost all of our fungicide tests from 1984 to now, and it is as effective now as it was when we first tested it.

There is some misinformation in the marketplace that this product is inferior to some of the newer fungicides that have been labeled in the past 10 years. This is simply not true. Tebuconazole is as effective on rusts and glume blotch as anything else that is being sold to control these diseases in wheat, and at a fraction of the cost.
Over the last two years, we expanded our fungicide research program to include an economic evaluation of some of the most common commercial soft red winter wheat varieties in the region. These varieties included AgriPro Magnolia, Pioneer 25R47, Pioneer 25R57, Coker 9553, and Terral LA 841. These two years were characterized by a light to moderate leaf rust infection overall. Terral LA 841 and Pioneer 25R47 were infected with moderate to heavy glume blotch in the Royse City location in 2009.

The following table summarizes these results:

Table 1: Yield Increase and Return on Investment Obtained by Spraying a Foliar Fungicide (Tebuconazole) on Five Commercially Grown SRWW Varieties in the Northern Texas Blacklands
 _______________________________________________________________
                                                           Yield Increase                             
                                        _______________________________        Avg. Return
                                          Royce City, TX     Howe, TX                      for Every 
                                        ______________________________          Dollar
Variety                                2009   2010             2010        Average     Invested      
________________________________________________________________
                                   _______________Bu/A_______________           $

AgriPro Magnolia                 -1.4     3.1                4.0            1.9           $1.68

AgriPro Coker 9553              2.3   -1.2                4.0            1.7           $1.51

Pioneer 25R47                     11.0    2.8                3.7            5.8           $5.16

Terral LA 841                        9.6    3.1                2.8            5.2           $4.62

AgriPro Jackpot          Not in Trial  21.1               3.4          12.3         $10.93
____________________________________________________________  
       
Bullet Summary 
  • We obtained a positive return on investment on all of the varieties evaluated in the trial. Using projected 2011 prices, we returned $1.51 to $10.93 for every dollar invested. 
  • The greatest return was achieved by spraying Jackpot HRWW, a variety that was heav-ily infected with leaf rust in 2010 at the Royse City location.
  • The yield increases observed with Pioneer 25R47 and Terral LA 841 in 2009 are attrib-uted to a late infection of glume blotch 
  • Based on two years of research, a foliar fungicide treatment with tebuconazole will be a wise investment this year, even under light to moderate disease pressure.
Fungicide Timing

For optimum results in controlling leaf rust and glume blotch, we suggest that tebuconazole be applied anytime between Feekes 9 and Feekes 10.5.1 (flowering). Based on multiple years of research, a single application of tebuconazole will provide 35 to 40 days of control which should protect the leaves throughout the grain filling period.

James Swart, Entomologist (IPM)                                                                     Dr. Curtis Jones, Agronomist
Texas AgriLife Extension                                                                                  Texas AgriLife Extension &
James_Swart@tamu-commerce.edu                                                                 Texas A&M University-

                                                                                                                        Commerce
                                                                                                                         Curtis_Jones@tamu-
                                                                                                                         commerce.edu

Texas Crop Weather - March 29, 2011

By Robert Burns (979) 845-2872

COLLEGE STATION -- The drought continued to expand in Texas, stunting crop growth, delaying planting and putting additional stress on livestock producers, according to Texas AgriLife Extension Service personnel.
As of March 22, the U.S. Drought Monitor ranked 29 percent of Texas as being under an extreme drought, and more than another 30 percent as being under severe drought. Overall, according to the monitor, 98 percent of the state is abnormally dry. More information on the drought monitor and its drought-
classification scheme can be found at http://www.drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html.

At this point, there are going to have be some very significant rains to make a difference in the crop situation, said Dr. Travis Miller, AgriLife Extension program leader and associate department head of the soil and crop sciences department, College Station.

"We measure drought over a three-month period, a six-month period, a year and so on," Miller said. "When you get a long-term deficit, it really takes a pretty good rain to move the needle and put you back into a normal situation."

All crops have been affected by the drought, including irrigated ones, but wheat is the one that's suffering the most right now, he said.

There's been a lot of corn, sorghum and some cotton going into the ground on "pretty marginal moisture" in South Texas, Central Texas and North Texas, Miller said.

Dry planting is risky even during normal times. But during a drought, farmers risk losing seed and other production costs if the planting is not followed soon by rain.

For cotton farmers, this risk has been magnified by recent advances in plant technology, Miller said. Most of the cotton seed used today is transgenetic and may cost $100 or more an acre --  as much as ten times what it cost in the late 1990s.

"So farmers are really reluctant to dry-seed -- and I would be so myself -- with what a bag of cotton seed costs," Miller said.

As for wheat, there have been numerous reports from AgriLife Extension county agents the crop is maturing too early, but this is a result of the warmer than normal temperatures and moisture stress, he said. Irrigated wheat is in better shape, but of the approximately 6 million acres of wheat grown in Texas, with
only about 1 million acres under irrigation.

But very high wheat prices, higher than have been seen for years, means there is a real incentive to irrigate wheat despite high pumping costs, he said.

"By irrigated, it means they can put water on it at some time during the crop's growing season," Miller said. "It doesn't mean they have all the water they need to finish the crop. And they may need that (limited) amount of water to pre-irrigate other crops such as corn and cotton."

More information on the current Texas drought and wildfire alerts can be found on the AgriLife Extension Agricultural Drought Task Force webpage at http://agrilife.tamu.edu/drought/. 

AgriLife Extension district reporters compiled the following summaries:

Central: The area remained extremely dry. The farming community became concerned that drought conditions were more critical than they earlier realized. Corn planting was nearly completed. Most corn and sorghum was planted in dry soil and needed rain before it could emerge. Cotton acreage was expected to be up from last year as planting began. High winds dried out soils. Pastures were green but growth was limited. Growers were planning to put in watermelon and tomato transplants.

Coastal Bend: The region had above-normal temperatures but no rain. As topsoil moisture dried out, some farmers stopped planting cotton and were waiting on a rain before resuming. Some cotton was replanted because of poor emergence after a rain two weeks ago.Rangeland and pastures needed rain as well. Forage
was becoming more available but was slow to respond due to the dry conditions. Livestock producers were still feeding some hay to make up for the lack of grazing.

East: The entire region remained extremely dry. Unusually warm, dry weather caused rangeland and pasture conditions to deteriorate. Planting of new forages was put on hold due to lack of moisture. Stock-water tank and pond levels were dropping drastically and, in some areas, were down to record lows.  Livestock remained in good condition with supplemental feeding being done -- particularly by those producers without winter pasture growth. The spring calving season was ongoing. There were widespread reports of feral hog
activity.

North: Soil-moisture levels were short in most of the region. Two weeks of  high winds drained soil moisture, causing ryegrass and other forages to decline.  Wheat and oats still looked good but were in desperate need of rain. Many farmers have started -- and some have completed -- corn planting hoping they will receive rain very soon. The dry weather made the corn planting easier, but that crop too needs rain. The warmer nights caused Bermudagrass and Bahia grass to begin to green up. Some producers were harvesting small grains and ryegrass for silage. Winter feeding of livestock waned. Peaches continued to look good.  The insect population was on the rise. Skunks were plentiful, but feral hogs remained the biggest wildlife problem. There have been several reports of hog sightings on properties within city limits. Rangeland and pasture conditions
ranged from poor to good.

Panhandle: The area continued to be dry and windy. Soil-moisture levels were very short in most counties. Wheat was in from very poor to good condition, with most counties reporting poor. Farmers continued preparing land for spring planting. Rangeland conditions varied from very poor to good, with most
reporting poor. Cattle were in good condition. The wildfire potential remained high.

Rolling Plains: Very warm and windy conditions continued to rule. Wheat showed signs of severe stress from lack of moisture. The same held true for rangeland forages, which needed rain soon to boost grass growth. Moisture stress appeared to have pushed wheat heading one to three weeks ahead of expectations. Some producers reported receiving insurance adjustments and crop releases on their wheat, while other producers were put on hold by the adjusters and might have to take the crop to harvest. Ranchers continued to provide supplemental protein to cattle because of poor forage quality. Stock-water tank levels were approaching critically low levels. Producers prepared fields for cotton planting. Some producers increased their cotton-planting acres.

South: The drought continued throughout the entire region. Soil-moisture levels were short to very short. Rangeland and pastures remained very dry and in poor condition, which caused livestock producers to further increase supplemental feeding. The lack of rain and persistent high winds caused forage quality and quantity to decline. Ranchers were selling cattle earlier than normal, but fortunately cattle prices were strong. Oat and wheat crop stands were in poor condition, with growth stunted. Corn growers completed planting, and most of the crop was already emerged. In the northern part of the region, potatoes were flowering. In the eastern part of the region, row crops were well established.  In the western part of the region, growers had to increase irrigation of onions, wheat, spinach, cabbage, corn, cotton and carrots, which added to their cost of production. Producers there are still concerned with not being able to make a crop of cool-season grains and had to delay planting of dryland sorghum, corn and cotton because of the extremely dry conditions. In the
southern part of the region, the harvesting of vegetables, citrus and sugarcane continued, planting activity wound down and spring crops made good progress.

South Plains:  The weather was warm and windy. A few areas received light showers, but overall the region remained very dry. The threat of wildfire was high throughout the region, and most counties were still under burn bans.  Livestock were still being supplemented. Wheat under irrigation was in good shape; dryland wheat was being adjusted out for insurance in some counties.  Producers were pre-irrigating and minimal tilling, hoping they'll eventually have enough moisture to plant. Public meetings were being held by the High
Plains Underground Water District to discuss proposed regulations to allow residents to meet the desired future condition of the aquifer for our the area under the state water plan.

Southeast: No rain came this last week, and many counties were extremely dry.  Wheat was not looking good at all. Some wheat headed out early when it was only about 15 inches tall. Rice planting continued despite of dry conditions. Pasture conditions continued to decline under the prolonged drought. The condition of livestock slipped, even though producers continued supplying hay and other supplemental feeds.

Southwest: Thunderstorms brought 1 inch to 2 inches of rain to parts of Bandera and Blanco counties, but the rest of the region remained very dry. High, dry winds continued to aggravate the drought and increase the number of roadside fires. Only very few small patches of bluebonnets, which are normally abundant at this time of the year, have appeared. The incidence of motor vehicle and wildlife collisions along roadsides continued to increase. Irrigated corn, sorghum and cotton fields made good progress. Rain will be needed very soon to allow dryland crops to progress. Growers were harvesting cabbage and spinach.  Onions made excellent progress. Cantaloupes, watermelons, green beans and sweet corn were planted and began to emerge in irrigated fields. Most pastures and rangeland showed some signs of green but most remained dormant due to the dry spell. Forage availability was below average.

West Central: Warm, dry, windy conditions continued to deplete soil moisture.  Wildfire was a big concern in all areas. Producers were preparing land for spring crops. Some producers were applying herbicides for spring-weed control on cotton fields. Dryland wheat remained in poor condition due to lack of moisture, but irrigated fields were doing well. Trees began to bud out and bloom.  Rangeland and pasture grasses greened up.