A striped flea beetle on a canola cotyledon.

Help your canola win the race with flea beetles

In an uncertain canola market, good agronomy can help limit spraying expense and lost yield from early flea beetle feeding

In an uncertain canola market, good agronomy can help farmers limit spraying expense and lost yield from early flea beetle feeding damage.



Colorado potato beetles, like the adult shown here chowing down on a potato plant, have adopted a less predictable emergence pattern.

Insecticides losing ground against potato pests in Western Canada

Resistance to insecticides is complicating pest control, prompting experts to advocate for farmers in North America to use more integrated pest management strategies in their potato fields

Resistance to insecticides is complicating pest control in potatoes, prompting experts to urge farmers in North America to use more integrated pest management strategies in their potato fields.

Chemical costs are down — but for how long?

Chemical costs are down — but for how long?

Agricultural chemical prices are down, but rising raw material costs and market volatility from, among other things, tariffs and a potential trade war, could bring on a rise

Agricultural chemical prices are down, but rising raw material costs and market volatility from, among other things, tariffs and a potential trade war, could raise them again.









Wireworms bore into a plant stem.

Wireworms a persistent insect pest on the Prairies

Nestled in the soil and hard to kill, wireworms are a headache for Manitoba growers

They’ll survive what would kill other crop pests. Some species will eat each other. If food is scarce, they might reverse molt to become smaller and harder to starve. They’ll go after grain crops, potatoes, onions, carrots, strawberries or almost any other field crop. Their tendency to feast on germinating seeds and young shoots under