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For Immediate Release
July 1, 2003
Contact: Jeannette Warnert
Ph: (559) 241-7514
Fax: (559) 241-7513
jwarnert@uckac.edu
California Pima cotton
growers faced with a challenging summer
Fresno – When consumers rest in fine Pima
cotton sheets in coming years, or feel the silky smoothness of a
Pima cotton shirt, they may not appreciate the stress that production
of those luxurious products caused California Pima cotton growers
during the summer of 2003.
Last April was one of the coolest and wettest
Aprils in the last two decades. Planting dates for some farmers
were pushed as late mid-May, six to eight weeks later than last
year.
"Since it's a premium product, Pima buyers
have a low tolerance for weathering damage," said Bob Hutmacher,
UC cotton extension specialist based at the UC Shafter Research
and Extension Center. "If it gets rained on in the fall and
the cotton sustains weathering damage or goes into the module with
a high moisture content, potential impacts on fiber quality and
price are significant."
That means the pressure is on California Pima
growers.
"There won't be much room for mistakes,"
Hutmacher said. "Management efforts this year will have to
be more intense. Plants will have to be monitored more closely.
Insect control will have to be more aggressive."
Cotton is a nearly $1 billion industry in California.
The majority of the state's cotton is grown in the San Joaquin Valley,
where most cotton acreage is Pima and Acala/Upland varieties that
have been developed, tested and selected for quality characteristics
through years of work by cotton breeders. These efforts have cemented
the valley's reputation as the source of the world's highest quality
cotton.
Pima cotton was named for the Pima Indians of Arizona, who worked
with USDA scientists breeding cotton on an experimental farm in
Arizona in the early 1900s. The plant they developed produces cotton
fibers that are longer, stronger and finer than Acala/Upland cotton
fiber. Those qualities weave into a softer, but more durable fabric.
Pima's premium characteristics don't go unrewarded.
Pound for pound, it is valued 25 to 30 percent more than Acala.
However, Pima varieties typically need 10 to 14 more days to grow
in the field than Acala. When the season is squeezed by unseasonably
cool weather in the spring or unseasonably wet weather in the fall,
Pima growers suffer the most.
UC researchers support Pima growers with consultation
and a wide variety of research at the UC Shafter Research and Extension
Center in Kern County, the West Side Research and Extension Center
in Fresno County, and at cooperating growers' farms.
A Pima cotton variety trial is being conducted
at six sites in the San Joaquin Valley, including the two research
and extension centers. At the West Side center, Hutmacher is studying
plant growth regulator timing for Pima cotton. Growth regulators
help farmers maintain cotton plant size suitable for optimum production.
UCCE farm advisors Bruce Roberts (Kings County), Steve Wright (Tulare
County), and Ron Vargas (Madera and Merced counties) are conducting
Pima defoliation trials. Cotton plants are defoliated before harvest
so green leaves do not stain the white fiber. Fresno County UC Cooperative
Extension farm advisor Dan Munk is looking at Pima cotton crop water
use.
"Because Pima has a longer season, in general,
it uses more water," Munk said. "However, we're seeing
Pima do a good job of handling water stress in water-short years.
It forages quite well for residual moisture deep in the soil."
Hutmacher said he is pleased Pima has put down
roots in California and is an option in addition to Acala/Upland
varieties.
"Twenty-five years ago, they said it couldn't
be done here. There was a lot of resistance," Hutmacher said.
"But by combining innovative farmers, open-minded regulators,
private and federal plant breeding programs and UC research, we've
created a premium niche market for California cotton growers."
Pima still represents a small fraction of the
US cotton crop. Across the country, Upland varieties, including
Acalas, are planted on 16 million to 17 million acres, while Pima
is on about 250,000 acres. But to the folks who are willing to pay
more for superior cotton products, the availability of premium California
cotton is invaluable.
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