June 29, 2018 CapitalPress.com 7 Sugar beet growers get pest alerts By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Matthew Weaver/Capital Press File David Weller, research leader for the USDA wheat health, genetics and quality research unit in Pullman, Wash., hopes to advertise soon for a researcher to study starch damage. Weller says the hir- ing process will take roughly six months. USDA to add another researcher for falling numbers ‘A-Team’ working to solve starch damage problem, leader says By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press The USDA will fund a new researcher to tackle a starch damage problem that in the past has cost Pacific North- west wheat farmers tens of millions of dollars. In the Omnimbus appro- priations bill last April, Con- gress approved $1 million for falling number research at the USDA Agricultural Research Service. Wheat growers and com- missions in Idaho, Oregon and Washington requested funding for the position. The new researcher will help develop new wheat va- rieties resistant to starch dam- age, as well as study envi- ronmental factors that trigger the problem and improve the falling number test, said Da- vid Weller, research leader for USDA’s wheat health, genet- ics and quality research unit in Pullman, Wash. Many factors can lead to low falling number test re- sults, Weller said, including wheat variety, temperature fluctuations and weather. Further research will hope- fully lead to a model to help growers and industry mem- bers determine when condi- tions cause starch damage. Weller hopes to advertise the new job soon. He esti- mates the hiring process to take roughly six months. The search for the re- searcher will be nationwide, he said, and include an ad- visory committee to screen candidates, who will visit the Washington State University campus, deliver a seminar and meet with faculty and com- mission members. In 2016, low falling num- ber test results hit a large por- tion of the Pacific Northwest’s wheat crop, costing growers between $30 million and $130 million in discounts. The hope is for the fund- ing to continue in the future, Weller said. “This is not something we’re going to solve in a few months.” Weller called the group of “world-class” researchers working on the project from USDA, WSU, Oregon State University and the University of Idaho the “A-Team of fall- ing number.” “We are all working as a team in a seamless effort to address all aspects of this par- ticular problem,” he said. “We are working night and day, as hard as we can, to find solu- tions.” The Pacific Northwest Pest Alert Network in late June notified sugar beet growers in southwest Idaho and eastern Oregon about powdery mil- dew, cercospora leaf spot and loopers. The advisories did not worry Wen- dell Robinson, agricultural manager for grower-owned cooperative Amal- gamated Sugar’s western region. “At this point, everything is man- ageable and treatable,” he said. Robinson said beet fields should remain healthy overall if growers stay aware of pest and disease threats and know how to treat them. A crop consultant with J.R. Sim- plot Co. found powdery mildew in fields near Adrian, Ore., and Parma, Idaho, a June 23 alert said. Staff with Amalgamated Sugar confirmed the finding. The alert said several fungicides are available to treat powdery mil- dew, and that applications should be repeated every two to three weeks de- pending on the disease pressure and Capital Press File Powdery mildew and cercospora leaf spot have been found in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon sugar beet fields. chemistry used. A network publica- tion said the fungus — whose spores can blow in from plants that carried over from winter, including previous- ly infected seed beets — causes small white patches on leaf surfaces. Wide- spread in several Western states for more than 40 years, it is often treated with sulfur dust. Powdery mildew is “more or less a recurring problem we are having in the Treasure Valley” of southwestern Idaho and eastern Oregon, said Amal- gamated Sugar Plant Health Manager Oliver Neher. “Most of the time we see it in early July and it moves from west to east, he said. “We are seeing it this year a little bit early.” Neher does not expect powdery mildew to be more of a problem than usual. Timely application of fungi- cide makes it fairly easy to control, he said. The network on June 25 advised beet growers to start scouting for CLS as temperatures rise, beet field rows start closing and irrigation stays intense. Favorable conditions for the fungus that causes CLS materialize when average nighttime temperatures exceed 60 degrees and humidity is 90 percent or higher for at least five hours, the alert said. An increase in fungicide resistance makes proper chemistry rotation im- portant in treating for CLS, the alert said. It recommended consulting with Amalgamated field staff. Sugar beet growers can control CLS by applying fungicide in a time- ly manner and by not over-watering crops, Robinson said. CLS was not a big problem in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon until four to five years ago, Neher said. “We saw a shift in temperatures and irrigation methods,” he said. As more irrigators used sprinkler pivots and hand lines, the moisture part of the equation became more favorable for the fungus that causes CLS, he said. If this year’s wildfire season is active, smoke conditions could in- crease relative humidity and in turn keep conditions favorable for CLS as leaves stay moist longer, he said. Also June 25, the network said Amalgamated Sugar reported that loopers, which are minor leaf-feeding pests controllable with biological or chemical means, were found in fields in the Caldwell, Idaho, area. Robinson said the small, worm- like loopers often are controlled by applying a pesticide in conjunction with regular fungicide applications. Apple forecast up; labor, trade worries remain By DAN WHEAT Capital Press The first forecast for this fall’s U.S. apple crop is up 3.6 percent from the 2017 crop, which should be man- ageable, but big concerns lin- ger about labor, fruit quality and exports, a top Michigan apple producer says. Total U.S. fresh and pro- cessed production was es- timated at 257.9 million, 42-pound boxes at the Pre- mier Apple Cooperative meeting in Syracuse, N.Y., on June 26. The USDA unadjust- ed figure for 2017 is 248.6 million boxes and the large 2014 crop was 272.2 million boxes, while the record was 277.3 million boxes in 1998. “We have a couple factors impacting this season’s mar- ketability. No. 1 is whether we have sufficient labor to pick on a timely basis to give us the quality we need, and the other issue is trade, that Dan Wheat/Capital Press Limbs cut to control fire blight are piled in an Okanogan, Wash., orchard. An early estimate of Washington’s 2018 apple crop is down partly due to fire blight while the national estimate is up. our biggest trading partners are or will be instituting tar- iffs,” said Don Armock, pres- ident of Riveridge Produce, Sparta, Mich., who attended the New York meeting. Lack of immigration re- form, including resolving DACA (Deferred Action of Childhood Arrivals), and in- creased immigration enforce- ment all weigh heavily on the immigrant community who make up most of the tree fruit workforce, Armock said. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids on a meat packing plant in the upper Midwest and President Donald Trump’s tweets about swift deportations unsettle the labor force, he said. As in Washington state, more large and mid-size ap- ple growers in Michigan and New York are turning to H-2A-visa foreign guest- workers, he said. “We can’t be taking chances on (domestic) work- ers who may or may not be legal,” he said. Unless resolved soon, tariffs by Mexico, Canada, India and China in retaliation for U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum, undoubtedly will affect U.S. apple exports, Armock said. It is unknown to what degree, he said. Typ- ically, 30 percent of U.S. ap- ples are exported. Mexico is imposing a 20 percent tariff on U.S. apples, India is adding 25 percent on top of its 50 percent tariff, China added 15 percent to a 10 percent existing tariff and will impose a 25 percent July 6 in retaliation for U.S. tariffs related to intellectual proper- ty theft. Canada has not set any tariff on apples. “When you insult (Cana- dian Prime Minister Justin) Trudeau like we have, people take a bit of an anti-American stance,” Armock said. Of the 257.9 million-box Premier estimate, Washing- ton is 152 million boxes, down 4.9 percent; Michigan, 33.5 million, up 43.1 percent; New York, 31 million, up 7.8 percent; Pennsylvania, 11.7 million, up .3 percent; California, 5.5 million, up .4 percent; and Virginia, 5.1 million, down 2.2 percent. Oregon is 4.2 million, up .8 percent and Idaho is 1.5 million, up 19 percent. The Washington estimate is down partly because of a higher level of fire blight, said Mark Seetin, director of regulatory and industry af- fairs of the U.S. Apple Asso- ciation, Vienna, Va. The Washington State Tree Fruit Association will forecast the Washington crop in Au- gust and U.S. Apple will give a national crop estimate at its annual Outlook conference in Chicago, Aug. 23-24. Idaho Barley Commission contributes to research post By BRAD CARLSON Barley is harvest- ed in Caribou County, Idaho. The Idaho Barley Commission has voted to add to the University of Idaho Foundation to help fund a post-doctor- al researcher. Capital Press Part of the Idaho Barley Commis- sion’s planned fiscal 2019 spending includes the first of five annual contri- butions to an endowment to help fund a post-doctoral researcher to work alongside Christopher Rogers, the University of Idaho endowed barley agronomist at Aberdeen. The commission on June 21 ap- proved directing $70,500 per year for the next five years to the UI Foun- dation to build the endowment. The UI College of Agricultural and Life Sciences in turn will guarantee fund- ing for the research position working with Rogers, said commission admin- istrator Kelly Olson. The post-doc research position is File photo courtesy of Jerry Brown now funded directly by the universi- ty for one year, and the commission wants to ensure the position contin- ues, she said. The commission this year com- pleted its $1 million commitment — $200,000 per year for five years — to the endowment that created the UI en- dowed barley research agronomist po- sition that Rogers holds. Lacking that line item and some one-time expenses in fiscal 2018, the fiscal 2019 budget the commission approved is down 12 percent to $688,167, Olson said. Commissioners approved esti- mated income of $713,840 for fiscal 2019. Income for fiscal 2018, ended June 30 and reflecting fourth-quarter checkoff collections, was not avail- able June 25. Olson said some carry- over barley from 2016 was not mar- keted until this year, and some 2017 production will not be marketed until next year. Idaho’s 4,000-plus barley grow- ers pay a 3-cent-per-bushel checkoff at the first point of sale. The check- off is designed to enhance growers’ profitability through research, market development and promotion, and in- formation and education programs. The commission does not engage in legislative lobbying, which is one of the tasks of the separate Idaho Grain Producers Association. News Display and Legals Classified Display Classified Line Ads PO Box 2048 • Salem, OR 97308 800-882-6789 www.capitalpress.com WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! 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! HAY PRESS SUPPORT: • Hay Sleeves • Strap • Totes • Printed or Plain • Stretch Film (ALL GAUGES) WAREHOUSE PACKAGING: • Stretch Film • Pallet Sheets • Pallet Covers LOCATIONS: Albany, Oregon (MAIN OFFICE) Ellensburg, Washington CONTACT INFORMATION: Phone: 855-928-3856 Fax: 541-497-6262 info@westernpackaging.com ....................................................... 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