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Sorghum producers discovered a new pest in their crops on the Gulf Coast of Texas in the summer of 2013. Less than a year later, the sorghum aphid (known at the time as the sugarcane aphid) decimated Oklahoma sorghum, causing more than a 40% reduction in grain yields and thousands of dollars in economic losses for farmers. Having no familiarity with the sorghum aphid, most producers didn’t realize how quickly the pests would multiply or what that multiplication would cost them. By the time many Oklahoma growers realized they had a problem, sugarcane aphid populations had reached numbers nearly impossible to control. All sorghum fields suffered that year. Some were lost altogether.
Read moreA suspect in the 2023 slaying of a Seminole man has been apprehended by Texas Rangers, the Seminole Lighthorse Police Department announced Friday.
Read moreSenate Pro Tem Greg Treat, R-Oklahoma City, Monday announced the long-awaited reduction in Oklahoma’s grocery tax will take effect Thursday.
Read moreState Farm Donates Printers to Seminole State College
Read moreAs I get older, I try to learn something every day. That’s not always possible, because some days I just watch reruns. I’m not alone in this mission. My friend Lucas spent months trying to read deeper meanings into old nursery rhymes.
Read moreTAOS Announces Students of The Month
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