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Experts for agriculture department to educate farmers

Lahore-Agriculture experts say it is high time for the agriculture department to educate farmers who switched over to cotton crop from water-intensive rice and sugarcane crops.

Experts say this year cotton is sown on more area as compared to the last year in the province. They say that growers followed the pattern due to the prevailing dry spell at the time of sowing as the dry weather is also assumed favourable for thick planting. But the pre-monsoon rains have caused humidity, which is injurious to thick planting. The Met office has been forecasting more rains this year.

Humid weather invites pest attacks on cotton. During early days of cotton plants' growth, Jassid and pink bollworm become the main threat to them. Pink bollworm is cotton specific that leaves yellow spot on silver fibre, which cannot be removed even at the time of spinning.

The experts says although the outlook of cotton crop at present is encouraging, humidity may proliferate pest attacks. Currently, pink bollworm infestation is reported from Khanewal, Pakpattan, Vehari, Faisalabad, Jhang and Multan districts. Experts urge the agriculture department to forewarn the cotton growers about pest attack and timely impart them pest management techniques. They say control of pink bollworm is highly desired if the government is serious in producing cotton of international standard.

They also disapprove thick planting saying in Australia cotton is picked through mechanical operation and plant's height there is merely 3 to 3.5 feet against cotton plant height of 5.5 feet in Pakistan. For mechanical picking such cotton varieties are sown which bear fruit only on top of the plant. While in Pakistan, cotton is still being hand picked and cotton plant bears fruit at bottom. Due to thick planting, that too in humid weather, the fruit at bottom of the plant becomes rotten, affecting the per acre yield.

The experts say 15,000 plants per acre on an average are suitable with a distance of 12 to 15 inches between every two plants.


 

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