Enhancing the Development of Short and Herbicide Resistant Flax
This project focuses on showing the benefits of improved flax varieties to farmers and adapting the trait to allow farmers to be as competitive as possible.
This project focuses on showing the benefits of improved flax varieties to farmers and adapting the trait to allow farmers to be as competitive as possible.
The proposed project will develop new generation of flax varieties which will enable the crop to be grown over larger areas in Canada.
Breeding efforts to develop lines with improved tolerance to heat stress are urgently needed.
Increasing the rate at which new flax cultivars are developed will improve the ability of the flax industry to meet changing market demands and to tolerate climate change.
flax may be a particularly good candidate for biological inoculants that have potential to improve P uptake.
This information will indicate the risk of flax wilt in a particular area and will help guide flax producers with decisions on which varieties to grow and which cultural practices are needed to mitigate disease damage.
The hypothesis of this project is that kochia infestations is primarily limited to those areas of the field with the highest levels of salinity. If seed production of kochia is controlled in the saline seed nurseries this will both reduce the selection for new herbicide resistance as well as the overall population in the field.
Our goal is to develop a bioformulation that can be applied to flax stubble that will accelerate its decomposition to reduce its interference with the flax seeding process.
September 5, 2025 – The Canadian canola industry is disappointed with the support measures announced today by the federal government […]
September 5, 2025 – Today, China’s Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) announced that it has extended its anti-dumping investigation into canola […]