CropWatch 2011: Watch canola for blackleg

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: June 23, 2011

,

A series of wet springs, combined with tight rotations, have led to increased risk of blackleg infection in canola crops, according to Alberta Agriculture in Wednesday’s CropWatch.

Farmers are encouraged to check canola crops early and regularly for signs of the disease, the provincial ag department warned. Fungicides should be used preventively before symptoms appear, effectively stopping the disease before it starts.

Among other items in Wednesday’s CropWatch:

    Read Also

    Fresh potatoes on display in a supermarket in Mexico. Photo: Sandor Mejias Brito/iStock/Getty Images

    Path cleared to Mexico for fresh Canadian potatoes, supplanting U.S. spuds

    A new agreement between national food safety agencies would allow Canada to export fresh potatoes to Mexico, whose imports of fresh potatoes for years have been solely from the U.S.

  • Winter wheat growers’ crops are nearing the flowering stage, when they’re most susceptible to fusarium head blight, Manitoba’s agriculture department says.
  • Armyworms are beginning to show up on fields in central Manitoba and are known to favour cereal crops and forage grasses, the province warns.
  • Seeding of the 2011 Prairie crop is now about 87 per cent complete, and with crop insurance deadlines past as of Monday, it’s unlikely much more crop will be seeded, the Canadian Wheat Board reports.

Are there other reports you’d like to see in the CropWatch feature? Let us know. That said, what you’ve seen or done in your fields so far this year might also help make the difference between a yield and a wreck for someone else. And if you’ve got something to add to a CropWatch item, just click on “Reply.”

Keep us posted on crop progress, unusual weather or pest problems in your area, as well as any questions you may have about a particular problem in the fields.

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications