![]() |
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
About the Foundation Media Contact |
News release
issued May 22, 2001, effective immediately. Foundation expands agricultural research "I would have expected to have some preliminary yield data from our 2000-2001 small grains and ryegrass variety trials by now. However, as most of you in the Oklahoma-Texas region know, this year's fall and winter forage production has been slow," Baker explained. "The crops started slowly. Soils were very dry through mid-October in south central Oklahoma. Most of our research plots were dry-seeded in October, the first measurable precipitation came on October 20, and stands emerged around November 1. "Ever since the rains started in October, it hasn't quit long enough to dry out. Low temperatures during November and December stunted growth and delayed development of the crops. Our tests have been harvested only once instead of our usual average of three times by this time of year," Baker said. First clipping dates were March 6 at the Burneyville Red River Demonstration and Research Farm (RRDRF) and March 16 at the Ardmore Headquarters Farm (HQF) for the small-grain variety tests. The ryegrass tests were clipped on March 21 and 22 at the Pasture Demonstration Farm northwest of Ardmore. Muddy fields forced harvest delays of seven to ten days. "I have not analyzed the first-harvest data, but preliminary data indicate that production of most of the rye varieties was more than double that of the other crops at all locations at this first clipping," Baker said. Since 1990, the Noble Foundation and Oklahoma State University have conducted a joint project at the RRDRF to evaluate the effects and benefits of rotating peanuts with corn, grain sorghum, and cotton rather than growing peanuts continually. This long-term study will be discontinued after the 2001 growing season. The plots will have undergone two full six-year cycles of rotation. This study was established on land that had not been planted to peanuts for fourteen years. The first cycle, 1990-1995, included corn, grain sorghum,
and cotton planted according to long-term rotation plans with two peanut varieties, Spanco and Okrun.
Since 1995, the experiment has also included fungicide treatments to allow the effects of Bravo alone
to be compared with that of Bravo + Folicur across each rotation treatment and variety. Dr. Ron Sholar
of Oklahoma State University, the lead investigator in this study, will be summarizing and reporting
the results after the 2001 growing season. In May 2000 the Foundation initiated a study at Ardmore to compare growth and persistence of ten seeded varieties and mixtures with that of three sprigged varieties, 'Tifton 44', 'Midland 99', and the experimental strain 74X12-6. "We anticipate solid stands this spring and will begin harvesting and recording forage yields. We will publish yields and other pertinent information from this study in the near future," Baker said. "Many of the Foundation's cooperating producers have recently inquired about growing summer annual forages (e.g., haygrazer, sudans, and pearl millet) and have asked what varieties are best suited to our environmental conditions. Oklahoma State University and Texas A&M University no longer do this testing, so we have no current information for this region," Baker pointed out. "Perhaps there is more interest this year because winter pasture is less available. At the Foundation's Headquarters Farm, we will initiate a summer annual-forage variety trial this spring (May 2001) on a number of sorghum-sudan, forage sorghum, pearl millet, corn, soybean, and cowpea varieties. "The plots will be harvested throughout the summer, as forage is available. We will evaluate forage dry-matter yields, total digestible nutrients, and crude protein content and estimate costs per pound of forage produced. This project will help identify adapted species and varieties for our service area and will be conducted over a two- to three-year period or as long as our producers express an interest," Baker said. The Noble Foundation also initiated three stocker cattle research projects in the fall and winter of 2000 that will likely be of significant interest to cattle producers in the area. Stocker cattle operations are common in the region, and many of these operations retain ownership of their cattle through the growing or finishing phase of production. The projects are briefly described below. Project 1: This study examines the effect of using alternative stocker-phase feeding programs on cattle performance and carcass merit. The primary objective is to provide information pertaining to the feasibility and economic impact of using soybean hulls in the stocker phase of production. The secondary objective is to determine whether feeding soybean hulls during the stocker phase affects performance traits or carcass characteristics at harvest. Project 2: The second project looks at the effects of stocker implant programs on stocker performance, carry-over finishing performance, and carcass characteristics of heifers. The objective is to provide information to producers concerning the growth performance effects of multiple implants during the stocker phase of beef production. Another goal is to provide information on how these implant programs affect performance during the finishing and carcass phases of beef production. The results will complement current data by providing information on how these relationships function in heifers. Project 3: In this study, Foundation agriculturalists will try to determine the profitability and performance differences caused by variations in frame size and muscular level in stocker cattle. The objective is to provide information to producers concerning net differences in production efficiency and economic factors of three USDA feeder cattle frame scores (large, medium, and small) and two muscle scores (1 and 2), the differences to be measured during both the pasture and finishing phase. At harvest, differences in carcass quality will be analyzed as they relate to value based on selling live versus on a grid. These three projects will be repeated over a three-year period. Collaborators are Colorado State University and Oklahoma State University. Results and pertinent information from these studies will be published by The Noble Foundation. ### The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural, forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs. To learn more, check out the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org. More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release |
|||||||||
|
© 1997-2008 by The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc.
|
||||||||||