Ag News
A potential solution for deer management in cotton
Posted on Apr 16, 2019 at 20:00 PM
The threat of deer eating the cotton grown on local farms prompted UGA Cooperative Extension Agriculture and Natural Resources Agent Katie Burch to search for a solution. With the help of UGA East Georgia Agronomist Mark Freeman, the Burke County agent may have found one.
Although the potential solution needs further research for verification, Burch believes Milorganite, a fertilizer made from sewage collected in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is an effective deterrent.
Milorganite was chosen because of its pungent smell and likely foul taste. Conducting her own research last year, Burch spread the fertilizer over cotton plots, then checked a week later to see if deer had been browsing the plots.
From all visible signs, the Milorganite had deterred the deer.
“Visually and percentage-wise for the counts that we took in the field, you can tell where the deer were deterred — where the Milorganite was spread — versus where they weren't,” Burch said.
The fertilizer treatment was applied once a week for four weeks. On the plots that weren't treated with the fertilizer, deer continued to mow through the cotton.
Burch started the project after she began working for UGA Extension in 2016, when deer caused major yield losses for a farmer in Burke County. Prior to testing Milorganite, Burch tried various chemicals and found none were an acceptable solution.
“This trial saw more success and the producer was happy about it,” she said. “This is something I think a lot of growers across the state can benefit from if we do find that it is successful long-term.”
According to Burch, deer are known to damage at least 50 percent of farmers’ crops across Georgia. This represents a major profit loss for farmers.
Annually, a farmer will spend thousands of dollars to try to stave off wildlife pressure. Some of those alternatives include night hunting equipment and traps, which are costly and not completely effective.
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