September 18, 2015 CapitalPress.com 17 CRP grazing extended for fire, drought victims By DAN WHEAT Capital Press SPOKANE, Wash. — Ranchers in Eastern Wash- ington who have lost grazing ground to drought or wildfire will be able to graze Conser- vation Reserve Program land through Dec. 15, says Judith Olson, state director of the USDA Farm Service Agency in Spokane. That’s welcome news and will help meet the short-term needs of hundreds of ranch- ers throughout Eastern Wash- ington dealing with grazing losses because of wildfires, said Jack Field, executive vice president of the Wash- ington Cattlemen’s Associa- tion in Ellensburg. CRP land is environ- mentally sensitive land the USDA pays farmers not to farm. There are 1,251,073 acres of CRP land in East- ern Washington and FSA is allowing grazing with no re- duction in government pay- ments to landowners, Olson said. Grazing may not be prac- tical on the entire acreage because of distance, lack of fencing and lack of water, she said. CRP grazing was recent- ly approved for drought vic- tims. Wildfire victims need to get county FSA approval of National Resources Conser- vation Service grazing plans to use CRP lands, but that can be done quickly, Olson said Emergency grazing of CRP land had been approved only through the end of the federal fiscal year, Sept. 30. Dan Wheat/Capital Press Black Angus cattle graze pasture they normally wouldn’t use until winter at Haeberle Ranch between Okanogan and Conconully, Wash., Aug. 31. Burned range in background. Ranchers throughout Eastern Washington are coping with loss of grazing grounds because of wildfires. The Cattlemen’s Association and Farm Bureau officials urged an extension to Dec. 15. “We have been working on this but it was contingent upon weather conditions and approval from the national of- fice,” Olson said. Field said the extension was the most crucial thing that can be done for produc- ers right now. Hundreds of ranchers in the northcentral, northeastern, southeastern and Mt. Adams area of the state have lost private and government allotment fall and spring grazing grounds to fires, he said. They are using winter ranges and hay early to get by and looking for short-term options for the fall, he said. CRP can be a big help but doesn’t always work because ranchers have to truck their cattle to the site and often have to haul water, put up temporary electric fences and run back and forth from their homes to tend cattle, he said. “Each producer has to de- cide if it can work for them,” Field said. “I’ve rented pas- ture 200 miles away and it’s very difficult.” FSA has a cost-sharing program for hauling water to sites, he said. CRP land is not available for grazing in the spring through Aug. 1 because of bird nesting, he said. Okanogan County was disproportionately hit by the large Okanogan, Tunk Block and North Star fires, Field said. Those fires total 518,540 acres out of more than 1 mil- lion acres burned in the state, according to fire officials. A lot of that land included graz- ing allotments. It’s difficult to assess grazing needs because ranchers won’t fully know how many cows they’ve lost in fires until fall roundups, Field said. Jon Wyss, president of the Okanogan County Farm Bu- reau, estimated 1,250 head of cattle are unaccounted for in the county. He said another 2,000 to 3,000 head probably will be sold off as ranchers decide they can’t feed them. All of that is about 43 per- cent of the 11,000 head in the county, he said. A total of 980 cattle died in the Carlton fire in the coun- ty last year, he said. Mother cows usually calve for seven years, so this year’s loss multiplied by seven years of production could be a $50 million loss in sales value, Wyss said. Fewer cattle were sold off after the Carlton fire last year because more grazing land was available, much of what is burned now, he said. “It’s unfortunate to be selling off herds because you can’t rebuild them overnight,” Field said. “In some situa- tions generations of genetics and breeding are lost. Those cattle knew those ranges. It’s difficult to put other cattle out there on range they were not raised on.” Herd reductions are bad for the Northwest beef indus- try, he said. Wyss, who chairs a local fire recovery group, said 95 homes, 94 cabins, 20 shops and garages and 89 outbuild- ings burned in this year’s Okanogan fire. That doesn’t include Tunk Block and North Star and compares with 312 homes, plus outbuildings burned last year in the Carlton fire. Wyss estimated 1,000 miles of fencing burned this year in the county that will cost an average of $8,000 per mile to replace. More sheep killed by Expert offers options for keeping slugs at bay Mount Emily wolves By MITCH LIES ODFW tallies five incidents this year By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group The Mount Emily wolf pack of northeast Ore- gon continues to prey on sheep in the Blue Moun- tains between Umatilla and Union counties, with five confirmed attacks so far in 2015 — all against the same producer. The last three incidents happened less than two weeks apart on Aug. 15, 24 and 27 in the Umatilla Na- tional Forest near Ninemile Ridge. Michelle Dennehy, spokeswoman with the Or- egon Department of Fish & Wildlife, said they have tried and will continue to use non-lethal deterrents such as guard dogs and in- creased human presence to keep wolves away from the area. Oregon lists wolves as endangered species east of highways 395, 78 and 95, though current man- agement rules would allow ODFW to consider lethal control of the Mount Emily pack if the rancher files a formal request. That hasn’t For the Capital Press happened yet, Dennehy said. Program coordinator Russ Morgan previously said their goal is not to kill wolves, but to find a way to stop livestock preda- tion. The focus is on those non-lethal deterrents, he said. A wolf conflict deter- rence plan is filed for the Mount Emily pack, which includes tips for hazing wolves away from sheep pastures. ODFW recom- mends herders should be stationed near the sheep and active at night when predation is likely to occur. Fladry fencing, guard dogs and alarm boxes can also be effective tools, according to the department. There are at least 77 known wolves document- ed in Oregon, most in the northeast corner of the state. The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission will look at a proposal to re- move wolves from the Endangered Species List in Eastern Oregon during meetings in October and November. Wolves in West- ern Oregon are listed by the federal government as en- dangered. SALEM — Penn State University entomologist John Tooker didn’t provide Oregon growers with any silver bul- let solutions to slug control during his visit to the Willa- mette Valley last week. But Tooker shared strat- egies Pennsylvania growers have used to lower slug pres- sure and encouraged Oregon growers to consider imple- menting some of them. “I would ask you to think about ways to incorporate some of these ideas, recog- nizing our annual cropping system in Pennsylvania is different than what you have here,” he said at an Oregon State University Extension meeting in Salem on Sept. 10. “By implementing these ideas, a couple of growers who have fully embraced them have made their slug populations go away.” Slugs are by most ac- counts among the worst pests in Oregon grass seed produc- tion, if not the worst. They accounted for nearly $100 million in damage to the $500 million crop in recent years. The mollusk also is respon- sible for substantial crop loss in several other field and row crops. Tooker, who has become a leading expert in slug control Mitch Lies/For the Capital Press Penn State University entomologist John Tooker, speaking at an Oregon State University Extension meeting Sept. 10 in Salem, provided Oregon growers with insight into slug control tactics that Pennsyl- vania growers have incorporated to protect their crops from slug damage in recent years. in recent years, said growers and researchers in Pennsyl- vania have found that use of cover crops and predator bee- tles, in the absence of insecti- cidal seed treatments, can be a successful formula for keep- ing slugs at bay. To start with, he said, slugs prefer certain cover crops over cash crops — a prefer- ence growers can use to their advantage. “If you give them a choice between a rye plant and a corn plant, they will choose the rye every time,” he said. Complementing the direct benefit of keeping slugs off grower’s primary crop, rye and crimson clover plants serve as hosts for beneficial insects that feed on slugs. “The rye distracts the slugs, allowing them to feed on something they like bet- ter than the cash crop, and it improves the ground beetle population,” he said. “Those two things together are taking the pressure off the cash crop, letting it get out of the ground and grow.” Some growers in Pennsyl- vania have even started plant- ing cash crops directly into a standing green cover crop, Tooker said. They follow that with a treatment of glypho- sate, which kills off the cover crop, but while the cover crop is dying, it is still palatable to the slugs and still fostering beneficial insect populations, he said. OSP asks for information Research opens door to new types of insecticides about wolf killings cial insects. gle-stranded, Scott and Mi- have enzymes in their guts that By JOHN O’CONNELL By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Wolf pups from Northeast- ern Oregon’s Sled Springs pair haven’t been seen since their parents were found dead within 50 yards of each other during the week of Aug. 24th, an Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife spokeswom- an said. Oregon State Police have been investigating the killings since the wolves were found dead, but didn’t make the case public until Sept. 16. “We didn’t want to tip our hand,” spokesman Lt. Bill Fu- gate said. Wolves are protected under state and federal endangered species laws, and killing them is a crime. OSP is asking any- one with information about the case to contact Senior Trooper Kreg Coggins at 541- 426-3049, or call the agency’s TIP line at 1-800-452-788, or On-line: The Sled Springs pair http: //dfw.state.or.us/Wolves/ AKWA/sled_springs.asp email TIP@state.or.us. Fugate said OSP won’t dis- close the cause of death at this time. The investigation began when a tracking collar worn by OR-21, a female, emitted a mortality signal, ODFW spokeswoman Michelle Den- nehy said. The female wolf and her mate were found dead. The pair had pups that would be about five months old and weaned at this point, Dennehy said. The pups hadn’t been seen as of Wednesday morning, but wolves are secretive and the pups should be free-ranging by now, she said. It’s unclear how many pups the pair had. Capital Press Experimental insecticides that turn off vital genes in spe- cific pests through a process called RNA interference are more durable and long-last- ing than previously suspected, according to new research at Cornell University. Cornell entomology pro- fessor Jeff Scott and his lab- oratory manager, Keri San Miguel, believe RNAi tech- nology could revolutionize the crop protection industry due to its ability to avoid col- lateral damage among benefi- cial insects that offer biologi- cal control of pests. “It has tremendous poten- tial in pest control since you might be able to make it very specific for a pest species,” Scott said, noting growers often encounter new insects of concern after trying a dif- ferent insecticide that disrupts a natural balance with benefi- Their find- ings were re- cently pub- lished in Pest Management Science. Scott RNA is essentially a copy of a DNA strand creat- ed as a messenger, alerting cells which proteins should be manufactured. RNA inter- ference introduces genes to destroy targeted RNA mes- sengers. Scott and Miguel initial- ly planned to work with an expert in sun screen resi- dues to develop a protectant to enhance their treatment’s durability. In nature, Scott explained the DNA of a de- composing bird, for example, is easy to extract, while the RNA is usually degraded. But they discovered pro- tecting the RNA was unneces- sary. While RNA messengers used by organisms are sin- guel utilized double-strand- ed RNA, which, like DNA, seems to withstand the ele- ments. In their greenhouse trials, RNA-based insecticide was effective against Colorado po- tato beetle for 28 days — and likely would have continued working had the experiment not been disrupted by anoth- er pest entering the green- house. The RNA-based prod- uct worked even after treated foliage was swirled in water, simulating rainfall. Though ultraviolet light quickly degraded RNA on a glass slide, the treatment was unharmed on foliage — poten- tially because it was absorbed into cells or shaded by leaf hairs. Scott is confident the re- sults would stand up in field trials. He said the approach is highly effective against bee- tles with larvae that feed on plants, but some pest species destroy the double-stranded RNA before it can enter their cells. More work is also need- ed to make RNAi effective on aphids, he said. Major chemical companies have also taken notice of the technology. In 2012, Syngen- ta and Devgen entered into a six-year agreement to jointly research RNAi technology. Monsanto researcher Greg Heck said the Cornell results are consistent with findings of his company’s ongoing dou- ble-stranded RNA research. Heck said Monsanto has a transgenic corn product using RNAi to control corn root- worm under regulatory review by agencies around the world. He believes the product of- fer a new mode of action that would forestall development of chemical resistance. Mon- santo is also developing a topical product line utilizing double-stranded RNA called BioDirect.