US EPA Has Regulatory Power Reduced by the US Supreme Court
TSTA staff
Late last week the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) issued a decision relative to the "Waters of the US" that was generally favorable to landowners and private property rights. The US EPA and the US Army Corps of Engineers had interpreted the Obama-era law as giving them jurisdiction over any body of water in the US that had potential to part of a larger whole and might connect to a navigable waterway. Navigable received a liberal interpretation as well. The rule EPA crafted covered virtually any conceivable intermittent waterway, drainage ditch, playa lake, or mud puddle. Many landowners, farmers, and ranchers, have had to seek permits for all manner of projects that "might" impact water on their property that added time and money to the effort.
In the opinion SCOTUS clarified the Clean Water Act (including Waters of the US of which it is a part) only pertains to those waters that have a "continuous surface connection" to navigable waters. Playa lakes, ponds, stock tanks, intermittent creeks are mostly out.
Justice Kavanaugh, in a concurring opinion criticized the "overly narrow" reading of the Clean Water Act by Justice Alito who wrote the majority opinion. Kavanaugh feared the new interpretation might endanger safeguards well established along the Mississippi River and the Chesapeake Bay though he nevertheless voted with the majority.
Justices Kagan, Sotomayor, and Brown signed on to Justice Kavanaugh's brief but also authored a dissenting opinion as they voted to uphold the EPA's rule to regulate every standing or running water entity in the country. As nothing the SCOTUS does is necessarily carved in stone the ruling could easily be revoked by future courts - but not today. This is good news for landowners.
Drought, quality drive TAMU peanut breeding
Every peanut variety TAMU now releases is high oleic, giving the varieties a quality advantage, breeder says.
by Ron Smith appearing in Southwest Farm Press
Drought tolerance and high oleic traits will drive Texas A&M AgriLife peanut breeding efforts as breeders look at declining irrigation capacity and a desire to create a quality advantage. “Everything we release now is high oleic,” says Texas AgriLife Plant Breeder Mark Burow, Lubbock.
“In West and Central Texas, conventional oleic varieties that do well in Florida and Georgia and possibly in South Texas show reduced shelf life. For the last 20 years, we have worked exclusively with high oleic peanut varieties. High oil content peanuts give us a quality advantage.” He said peanut butter manufacturers have turned away a bit from high oleic varieties in the past few years. With confection products, however, a single seed is more important. Off-flavor can affect the product. Peanuts sold as individual peanuts — in-shell and packaged — are also affected by off-flavor.
Burow said a declining aquifer and reduced irrigation capacity also concern peanut producers. “We are working on release documents for a runner variety that grows better than conventional varieties under reduced water. We hope to be able to grow peanuts with less water.” Burow says South Texas producers do not face as extreme water deficits as West Texas growers. But it doesn’t rain regularly even in South Texas. The Edwards Aquifer also gets more urban demand.
“Drought-tolerant peanut varieties are very important,” he says. “We are growing seed increase this year on half-acre plots for the varieties we plan to write release papers for later this year. One is a high oleic runner.” He said few peanuts have been grown in Central Texas for a long time because of disease issues, especially sclerotinia. “We do have some resistance to it.”
Burow says several peanut varieties are nearing commercialization with others in the pipeline. “Tamrun OL8L is a larger seeded runner peanut. It and Tamrun OL19 mature one to two weeks earlier than similar varieties.” Both are high oleic and early maturing to address off-flavor. “We think these varieties are less susceptible to off-flavor,”Burow says. “When we harvest immature peanuts early, coupled with warm daytime temperatures, we sometimes get anaerobic activity and a fruity flavor. If we have to harvest early, these varieties offer a little better yield.”
He said the two new varieties were released this year. “We hope to grow them out this year.” He adds that despite the Vernon, Texas, shelling plant being hit by a tornado last April, they hope to get some seed increase this year.
“The Texas A&M AgriLife breeding program is looking at seed increase for a number of varieties. We have advanced breeding lines out for flavor analysis that look pretty good.
“We just released AG 18, Michael Baring as lead breeder, and seed is being increased and scaled up. AG 18 is a high oleic runner featuring high yields and high grades, with a high shellout.”
AgriLife peanut breeders are also looking at nematode resistance. “NemaTAM II, John Cason and Charles Simpson as leads, has high yield and grade and root knot nematode resistance. Root knot infection is sporadic, but we do see it in peanuts,” Burow says.
Sclerotinia blight and leaf spot resistance are other targets. “We can control leafspot chemically but it is expensive to do. We don’t see it as much in West Texas as in South Texas. With resistant varieties, growers can save on spray applications or reduce yield losses. That’s also true with Sclerotinia. We screen for resistance.”
In other projects, breeders are trying to combine high oleic, drought tolerance, and root knot nematode resistance in a runner variety. “We’re also working on a drought-tolerant Spanish variety and we plan to write a release on two high oleic Virginia varieties,” Burow says. “These will be the first Virginias released by Texas A&M AgriLife. They are high oleic and yield at the top of the test.”
He says one variety has smaller seed, but, based on several years of data, the smaller-seed variety yields a little better. “With the release of the high oleic Virginia varieties, we hope to have high oleic varieties in all four market types, which will improve growers’ profitability. That’s our goal.”
He says an AgriLife project in cooperation with Chevron has a ‘diesel nut’ peanut breeding line with a 55% to 60% oil content. “The breeding line looks good and we hope to release something soon.” He says the high oil content peanut might find a niche in fields with limited irrigation or dryland. “This peanut will not have the same issues with seed size and quality as varieties grown for the edible market,” Burow says.
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