Del. Researcher Seeks Com ii one of Delaware’s (figuring an overage of 80 biggest agricultural crops, bushels on acre). As Some 104,000 acres of com everyone knows, though, were grown in the state last that's not what Delaware year, much of this in Sussex farmers got last year. Even county. Yields from that size with a bumper crop in New planting should have been Castle county to offset the around 15,520,000 bushels disaster downstatc, PIG and SOW CASTLE p Now, at far less than you'd pay for an ordinary structure, you can give your pigs the royal treatment they survive and thrive on The new STARCRAFT Pig Castle gets your pigs indoors under controlled conditions where you can save more of them and also save feed and labor by getting them to market faster The STARCRAFT Pig Castle can easily pay for itself in saved pigs, saved labor and saved feed And what you get in the bargain is a big boost in your morale Because while you're improving your pigs' living environment, you're also improving your own working environment Your STARCRAFT Pig Castle nursery building will be delivered to you ready to use When it's delivered by flat-bed truck it's placed in any convenient location you choose All you do is provide a crushed rock base, or preferably a 4-mch See Our Calf Castle on Display at: starc^^t; JKGFtI F>PRODUCTS O/V//S/O/V Drought R Delaware’s 1974 corn yield was only 12,416,000 bushels - some three million less than It should have been. The drastic effects of last summer's drought underline what growers and agronomists have known all along-thc major problem in corn production on the Dclmarva peninsula isn't disease or insects, but moisture stress at critical periods during the growing season. People are looking at a number of solutions to the problem. Some arc suggesting weather modification as an answer. Others look to irrigation as the cure. Many feel this would be the best and safest way to meet the need for water, but only a few growers have irrigation now, and for one reason or another a large percent of corn farmers aren’t likely to get irrigation systems for themselves in the near future. This leaves two other solutions-the modification of cultivation techniques and the development of com hybrids that are drought tolerant. University of Delaware plant geneticist, Dr. Sue Sullivan, wants to see what can be done to modify existing corn hybrids to hiake them more tolerant of the frequent drought con ditions of lower Delaware. “Most of our hybrids are a result of research and development in mid-western that lets you cut pig raising costs concrete slab then hook it up to water and electricity and turn in the pigs It comes complete with slotted floors, manure pit, ventilation system (that pulls air over the tops of animals, down thru the pit, and out, for virtually odor-free conditions), choice of UP Gas or electric heater, feeders, waterers, wash able interior walls of Fiberglasfreal redwood exterior walls, full insulation, and lots of other features Here's the pig raising system that can make the job almost a pleasure' For complete and speedy details, use the coupon No obligation, of course E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT, IHC R.D.I, Willow Street esistant Com Lanca,ter Far?^ lurd,y ’ MarchB ' 19 corn states," the explains, yielding carly-season "A whole different world hybrids which miss or exists there. Soil types and “avoid” moisture stresses fertility arc different, altogether, climate varies in regard to Promising corn hybrids humidlty-which gives dif- that Dr. Sullivan identifies ferent disease problems-and will be used in no-till tests there are different patterns being conducted by fellow of moisture stress and dif- plant scientists at the Ex ferent effects of stress due to periment Station, as well as the water-holding capacity in conventional tillage of soils in the two regions.” studies. What the resear- Dr. Sullivan secs a need to chcrs as a group hope to develop new hybrid com- come up with, says Dr. binations which will perform Sullivan, is a package of better on the light, sandy drought-tolerant hybrids and soils of the Delmarva crop management peninsula. She plans to begin techniques which will result work in this direction this in higher, more consistent summer at the University of yields for Delaware com Delaware’s Agricultural growers Experiment Station farm in Georgetown. The first thing she will be looking for are the factors in corn plants that contribute to drought tolerance. These factors include fast developing, deep-growing root systems better able to extract moisture from the soil and the ability of some plants to use water more efficiently-possibly by closing leaf pores (stomata) in stress conditions so that they lose less water mto the air. Some hybrids have multiple-ear tendencies, others will produce larger ears at lower plant populations-other important factors. Since the corn plant’s need for water is greatest around silking tune, the geneticist will also be looking for plants which silk well under moisture stress. 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