September 2, 2016 CapitalPress.com 9 Oregon Idaho seeks growers’ input on pollinator plan wild horse roundup canceled By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press Capital Press A planned roundup of wild horses from the Three Fingers herd in Malheur County, Ore., has been canceled due to a rangeland ire in the area. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management decided to with- draw its decision to gather 100 of the herd’s 200 horses near Jordan Valley, Ore., in late Au- gust, forestalling at least tempo- rarily an animal rights group’s lawsuit seeking to block the action. Of the gathered horses, the BLM planned to remove half for eventual adoption and re- lease the remainder after treat- ing females with a contracep- tive to slow the herd’s growth. Friends of Animals, a New York-based nonproit, iled a lawsuit against the agency, ar- guing the roundup was ordered without an environmental re- view, as mandated by federal law. According to the complaint, BLM relied on an outdated en- vironmental analysis from 2011 that didn’t take into consider- ation new information about the negative impacts of the fer- tility control drug Porcine Zona Penucide, or PZP. The planned August round- up was also aimed at protecting sage grouse habitat and ire restoration projects, neither of which were studied under the 2011 analysis, the complaint said. Since then, a study has found that PZP can remain ef- fective longer than expected, causing foals to be born outside the normal birthing season, and is associated with ovulation failure, according to Friends of Animals. The nonproit group asked U.S. District Judge Michael Simon to issue a temporary restraining order blocking the roundup, which BLM opposed in court documents. The BLM argued that it was permitted to rely on the 2011 analysis in forming its most recent decision to gath- er horses and that Friends of Animals hadn’t followed the proper administrative process to stop the roundup. If the horses continue to multiply, they will spread out and damage areas that are only now beginning to recover from ires last year, the BLM said. “That will lead to further degradation of the range, ulti- mately destroying the habitat on which they and numerous other wildlife rely,” the agency said in a court document. Before oral arguments in the dispute could be held, how- ever, BLM issued a notice that the roundup won’t take place because a wildire had burned much of the area where it was to occur. The BLM apparently re- ferred to the Cherry Road Fire near Jordan Valley, which ig- nited on Aug. 21 and burned more than 35,000 acres before ireighters contained it on Aug. 28. Friends of Animals has withdrawn its motion for a temporary restraining order, though it’s not dismissing the lawsuit while it weighs its op- tions, the group said in a court iling. Associated Press ile A hive of honeybees is displayed. Idaho is convening a group that will write a state pollinator plan. Pollinator protection plans have been adopted or are be- ing drafted in 45 states, ac- cording to Dudley Hoskins, public policy counsel with the National Association of State Departments of Agri- culture, a leading advocate of state pollinator plans. Hoskins explained ive states, includ- ing California, implement- ed the irst plans in response to concerns about the rising mortality of pollinators such as bees and monarch butter- lies. In May 2015, a pollinator task force convened by the federal Environmental Pro- tection Agency and USDA issued a report, recommend- ing that states draft pollinator plans. “These are not meant to be a regulatory vehicle,” Hoskins said, adding effec- tive plans have prioritized “sharing information about each other’s practices and challenges.” Pistachio growers eye record crop after light last year By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press After a couple of seasons of disappointing crops, pis- tachio growers appear poised to shatter a 4-year-old record with production that could weigh in at as much as 800 million pounds. Trees are loaded with nuts after achieving suficient chill hours last winter for the irst time in three years and win- ter rains diminished drought conditions in many California orchards, said Richard Ma- toian, executive director of American Pistachio Growers in Fresno. As a result, growers and processors expect to easily surpass the record 2012 crop of 555 million pounds, more than 551 million of which came from California, Ma- toian said. “The range will likely be somewhere between … 650 and 800 million pounds” this year, he said. The projection comes as the harvest has started for the earliest varieties and is expected to be in full swing in September. Pistachios are grown on more than 300,000 acres, according to APG. The apparent bumper crop follows a 2015 season in which the drought and a lack of winter chilling hours caused growers to encoun- ter an inordinate amount of “blanks” — fully formed shells in which a nut never developed. In a typical season, blanks might make up 10 percent of a crop, but in some orchards last season the number was closer to 70 percent. With the short crop, grow- ers expected to receive con- siderably more for their nuts. But the main overseas com- 36-4/#7 By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI BOISE — The Idaho State Department of Agriculture is forming a committee of ag- ricultural organizations and other stakeholders to help de- vise a statewide plan protect- ing the health of pollinating insects. The irst meeting is sched- uled for Sept. 27, and 17 organizations have already been invited, including the Idaho Potato Commission, the Idaho-Eastern Oregon Seed Association, Treasure Valley Beekeepers Club and the Idaho Honey Industry As- sociation. ISDA will welcome any other organizations interested in participating in the discus- sion, said George Robinson, administrator of the agency’s Division of Agricultural Re- sources. ISDA staffers have cre- ated a “straw-man” draft, drawing heavily from North Dakota’s state pollinator plan, to spur discussion, Rob- inson said. He explained the draft is a guidance document, outlining best practices for each interest group to bene- it pollinator health, with an emphasis on strong commu- nication. “(Plans) vary a lot from state to state,” Robinson said. “I think that is a relection of those states going to their stakeholders and asking them, ‘What’s best for our state?’” Hoskins said the initial states that implemented plans have made great progress for pollinators. “These are clear returns on investment we’ve seen in a handful of states already,” Hoskins said. Oakley potato farmer Ran- dy Hardy will represent the IPC on Idaho’s committee. Hardy said virtually all of Idaho’s conventional potato producers use the systemic in- secticide imidacloprid to pro- tect their crops from diseases such as potato leafroll virus. The chemical is in the neonic- otinoid class, which has been targeted for regulation due to possible impacts on pollina- tors. Hardy said spud growers apply the chemical as a seed treatment or in-furrow, having no effect on bees. “If (regulators) know states are watching (pollina- tor health) and monitoring and coming up with their own procedures, it will go a long way,” Hardy said. Scott Hamilton, a Nampa beekeeper who is vice pres- ident of the Idaho Honey In- dustry Association, believes pollinator declines have been caused by several factors, in- cluding harmful mites and pesticides, but improving communication and education is the best approach to address the problem. “Farmers aren’t out to kill pollinators,” Hamilton said. “A lot of farmers use bees to pollinate their seed crops.” petitor, Iran, had two large crops in a row, which enabled the country to gain market share in American export des- tinations such as China, Ma- toian said. This year, growers have been initially guaranteed be- tween $1.70 and $1.80 per pound, down from the rough- ly $3.50 per pound growers received for their 2014 crop, he said. However, the price could end up increasing via a nego- tiated “marketing bonus” that growers usually receive at the season’s end, Matoian said. One factor that could push prices up is a frost in Iran that cut into that nation’s produc- tion, which could enable the U.S. to regain markets it had lost, he said. Last season’s light yields were a blip of sorts amid a winning streak for pistachios, whose popularity has in- creased in recent years while acreage has ballooned from 105,000 acres in 2005, Ma- toian has said. Nearly all of the U.S. pis- tachio production is in Cali- fornia, and 97 percent of that is in the San Joaquin Valley. The acreage has continued to boom despite the drought, largely because pistachio trees have a longer life span than other nut trees and can survive several years in a row of water stress even if they don’t produce nuts. Growers believed that they would produce a big crop once enough chilling hours mounted and rains fell in the previous winter. “As I talk with growers … they’re still very positive and very high about pistachios in comparison with other commodities,” Matoian said. “We’re still doing pretty darn well.” Tim Hearden/Capital Press Roasted pistachios from Paramount Farms in Lost Hills, Calif. This year’s pistachio crop is progressing well as orchards are being prepared for harvest. WE SPEC IAL IZE IN B UL K B A GS! BAGS: • Seed Bags • Fertilizer Bags • Feed Bags • Potato Bags • Printed Bags • Plain Bags • Bulk Bags • Totes • Woven Polypropylene • Bopp • Polyethylene • Pocket Bags • Roll Stock & More! 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