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Cotton• First grown in Texas by Spanish missionaries
– Reports date back to 1745
• Jared E. Groce brought cotton production to Texas in 1821– Settled in Lower/Middle Brazos River Valley
• Cotton replaces tobacco as #1 cash crop
• Slave-based cotton plantations– South Central Texas on Lower Colorado, Brazos, and
Trinity rivers– Blackland Prairies and Cross Timbers of North Central
Texas
Cotton
• Uses: – Clothing, linens, draperies, upholstery, carpet,
nitrocellulose (used in explosives), and artificial plastic
Cotton Gin
Slave Plantation
Wheat
• First grown commercially in Texas near Sherman about 1833
• Expanded greatly in North and Central Texas after 1850
• A new strain of wheat, the soft red winter wheat, spread across North West Texas between 1830 and 1890– Very durable and heat-resistant strain
Sorghum
• Introduced to Texas in 1879 by H.B. Pratt
• In Texas sorghum is primarily grown as forage for cattle, sheep, and horses and as grain to feed cattle, sheep, swine, horses, and poultry.
• The sorghum crop is important in the Rio Grande valley, in the coastal bend, on the Blacklands from San Antonio to Greenville, on the Rolling Plains, on the South Plains, and in the Panhandle
Sorghum
• Mechanization in the 1930s reduced the need for grain in feeding livestock, making it possible for sorghum to be used as a grain cash crop like wheat and cotton
• In the 1940s sorghum became the leading cereal crop in the state for the first time
Corn (Maize)
• Corn in Texas dates all the way back to prehistoric times– Spanish explorers of the 1500s found Indians already
growing corn in East Texas and they then carried it to the Rio Grande Valley
• Used as a basic ingredient in tortillas, tamales, posole, and atole
Corn (Maize)
• Centuries later, Americans settling Texas would also rely on corn as a vital crop and incorporate it into the southern agricultural tradition
• The newcomers used corn as a major source of food and the #1 feed crop
Corn (Maize)• They also used the cobs for jug and
bottle stoppers, smoking pipes, tool handles, corn shellers, back scratchers, torches, fishing floats, firewood, and meat-smoking fuel
• Even the stalks and leaves were used in sub-roofing, roof thatching, scarecrows, light fencing, erosion stoppage, and emergency material for the construction of shelter.
• Grown primarily in the East half of Texas
Rice
• The first major rice farmer in Texas was David French of Beaumont in 1863
• Commercial production really began in 1883 with the completion of the southern transcontinental railroad
• Grown primarily on the coastal prairies and milled in Port Arthur, Beaumont, Orange, and Houston
Rice
• Rice still remains an important crop in Texas and the state is still one of the top rice producers in the U.S.Rice Mill
Weathering the Weather• Farmers have faced problems with the
weather throughout Texas history
• Crops have suffered from too little rain some years, too much rain in others, and from damage caused by hail as well
Agricultural Pests
Rice Pests
Stinkbug
Rice Water Weevil
• Pest control is a delicate issue because the methods have to work, be cost-effective, and safe for the agricultural product
• Biological control
• Introducing the pests’ natural predators into the ecosystem
• Plant-derived insecticides
• Insect pheromones
• Disrupt insects’ development
Pest Control
Modern Research: Bt Cotton/Corn• Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is a bacteria in soil
that produces a toxin that is effective specifically against certain insects
• Research in genetic engineering has allowed for the incorporation of the toxin-producing genes into cotton and corn plants, making them resistant to some important pests
• This modern invention has cut down on the use of dangerous pesticides in some parts of the world