Deltapine Reveals Class Of 19 Varieties

deltapine logoDeltapine cotton announced the release of three new Bollgard 3 XtendFlex cotton varieties as part of the brand’s Class of 19 lineup during the annual New Product Evaluator Summit held recently in Phoenix, Arizona.

“The Deltapine Class of 19 features a diverse group of varieties that focus on bringing regional-fit products to specific areas where farmers have expressed need,” says Keylon Gholston, Deltapine cotton product manager. “We are excited about how well these new cotton varieties fit within our broader portfolio and fill needs within the broader Deltapine variety lineup.”

The four new varieties feature XtendFlex technology as part of the Roundup Ready Xtend Crop System, making them tolerant to three modes of action for flexible and effective weed management.

DP 1948 B3XF, DP 1908 B3XF and DP 1909 XF are the Class of 19 varieties for Southwest geographies. DP 1916 B3XF is the Class of 19 variety for Mid-South/Southeast geographies.

■ DP 1948 B3XF is a mid-full maturity variety showing good yield potential, especially in the tough growing conditions of Texas. The new DP 1948 B3XF is similar to DP 1646 B2XF, showing the ability to elevate performance in low-yield environments. This variety, which offers Bollgard 3 technology for added protection against cotton bollworms, is well-adapted to South Texas, the Rolling Plains and the Southern High Plains.

■ DP 1908 B3XF and DP 1909 XF are products from the Deltapine West Texas breeding and testing programs with very early to early maturity. Both varieties have shown good early vigor and are smooth-leaf varieties with resistance to bacterial blight. DP 1908 B3XF and DP 1909 XF offer excellent fiber quality and are adapted for the Northern High Plains and the Texas Panhandle, as well as Oklahoma and Kansas.

■ DP 1916 B3XF is an early-maturity variety that demonstrated good fiber quality and outstanding yield potential in 2018 NPE grower evaluations.

Positioned for the northern areas of the Mid-South, the Carolinas and Virginia, this variety compares well to DP 1614 B2XF but offers better early vigor and stand establishment. It is comparable in yield potential to DP 1725 B2XF and offers Bollgard 3 protection.

Each NPE variety candidate must bring a combination of improved yield, fiber quality and agronomics, including trait stack, to the market before it can be commercially named. The Class of 19 is no exception.

All four new varieties were evaluated by Deltapine NPE growers, who grew them in module, or larger, sized plots under their own management styles and growing conditions.

“The commitment we made to NPE growers when we started this program in 2008 was that we would only commercialize a variety if it performed as well as, or better than, current Deltapine varieties on the market in terms of yield, fiber quality, trait technology or disease package,” Gholston says. “Over the past decade, I think we’ve done a great job of living up to that commitment with our new varieties.”

For additional information about the Deltapine cotton varieties and the NPE Program, visit www.deltapine.com. Photos, videos, agronomic tips and more can be found on Twitter (@Deltapine) and on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Deltapine.

Deltapine brand cotton provided information for this article.

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