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   Winter
 more...>Louisiana Agriculture Magazine>Past Issues>2001>Winter>

 

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ON THE COVER
Lisa Barona McRoberts, LSU graduate and owner of an apparel design businessin Baton Rouge, Lisa B. McRoberts, Inc., designed this evening gown as part of an independent study course under the direction of Yvonne Marquette, an instructor in the School of Human Ecology. The dress won top honors from Fashion Group International in both regional and national competitions. The dress features a bustier made of American alligator leather. Funding for this project was provided by the Louisiana Fur and Alligator Advisory Council. The skirt is made of satin accented with lace, hand-beaded appliques. The gown was produced as a prototype garment to promote the use of American alligator leather in fashion apparel products. The model, Nichole Durham, was photographed at the Old State Capitol in Baton Rouge. Photo by John Wozniak.

in this issue


Figure 1
Comparing Mating Systems for Producing Weanling Calves
Commercial cow-calf production is the primary beef cattle enterprise in Louisiana. The state has about 550,000 beef cows in 15,000 herds located in all parishes but Orleans. The primary product marketed from these herds is the weaned calf. At least 80 percent of the cow-calf herds in Louisiana use crossbred cows of one kind or another, and most of these crossbred cows have some Brahman inheritance.
New Patented Process Helps Diagnose Insecticide Resistance
Cotton farmers may soon have a new way to evaluate the effectiveness of one class of insecticides, thanks to a new LSU AgCenter procedure that received a U.S. patent.
Table 1
Fertilizer Nitrogen Sources, Poultry Litter Rates Affect Annual Ryegrass Production
Beef and dairy producers in north Louisiana plant more than 30,000 acres of hill land to annual ryegrass each fall for grazing cattle during the winter and spring. Nitrogen is the most limiting plant nutrient required for annual ryegrass production on these sandy Coastal Plain soils.
Figure 1
Preliminary Evaluation of Bollgard II Cotton
The commercial release of Bollgard cotton in 1996 gave cotton growers a new pest management tool. Bollgard cotton, a transgenic product, includes a gene from a bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis. This transferred gene enables the plant to produce a toxin that provides significant control of the tobacco budworm, Heliothis virescens, and the pink bollworm, Pectinophora gossypiella, while being safe for humans, other animals and the environment.
cover
Louisiana Agriculture Magazine Winter 2001
Vol. 44, No. 1
Cantaloupe
Rotating Cantaloupes with Nematode-Resistant Tomatoes Produces Higher Yields without Chemical Control
Root-knot nematodes cause significant yield losses in many horticultural crops. Double-cropping cantaloupes with a nematode-resistant tomato can improve cantaloupe yields in soils that have a history of root-knot nematode.
Skirt and Vest
Finding New Markets for Louisiana’s Alligator Industry
Alligators and fashion may bring different images to mind, but the combination offers potential for Louisiana’s economy. A research initiative to explore ways to increase domestic demand for finished products made with American alligator leather began in 1997. The goal is to find more opportunities for Louisiana’s alligator business.
Harrison
Harrison, Fuxa and sugarcane team win LSU AgCenter research awards
Stephen A. Harrison, James R. Fuxa and the Experiment Station's Sugarcane Breeding and Variety Development Team won the top research awards presented as the LSU AgCenter's Annual Conference Dec. 11 and 12, 2000.
Peach
LaSweet, LaRouge and LaBelle Join List of LSU AgCenter Peaches
The LSU AgCenter has released three new peach varieties, which will be available commercially in the fall of 2001. Their names match their characteristics somewhat, says Charlie Johnson, horticulture researcher and developer of the varieties. LaSweet is low-acid and very sweet. LaRouge has a bright red skin. And LaBelle is a late-season peach that will extend Louisiana’s fresh peach season into mid-July.
Dean Lee Research Station
Nematodes Affect Beef Cattle Weight Gain
Nematode parasites make a big difference in the appetite of beef cattle and thus their weight gain. Left to right are four of the paddocks used in nematode research at the LSU AgCenter’s Dean Lee Research Station near Alexandria. The road about a third of the way from the top serves as one border, and the tree line at the bottom is another border.
Johnsongrass
Johnsongrass Resistance to Graminicides in Northeast Louisiana
Discovery of new postemergence grass herbicides (graminicides) in the late 1970s and early 1980s gave producers a highly effective means for over-the-top control of most annual grasses and perennial grasses, such as johnsongrass, in cotton and soybean fields. Continued reliance on these herbicides has brought about increased selection pressure for resistant populations.
Light Bar
Light Interception: A Way for Soybean Farmers to Determine When to Spray for Defoliating Insects
Insects that eat soybean leaves, such as the soybean looper, velvetbean caterpillar and green cloverworm, usually attack in late August and September. Because determination of economic threshholds for each specific stage of seed filling is difficult, an alternative approach based on light interception was investigated.
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