Canadian flax genetics on road to improvement

Fewer Manitoba farmers grow flax than they used to, but work into new varieties may increase the oilseed’s appeal in Western Canada

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Published: April 2, 2025

Saskatchewan crop researcher Bunyamin Tar’an presents his flax results at a Diverse Field Crops Cluster Research Day in March.

Glacier FarmMedia – Progress is being made in flax genetic research, according to a Saskatchewan researcher in flax and chickpeas.

Bunyamin Tar’an works at the University of Saskatchewan’s Crop Development Centre in Saskatoon. As part of the Diverse Field Crops Cluster (DFCC), he and his colleagues have been working on integrated approaches to improve flax varieties for western Canadian farmers.

The project has three main objectives, the main one being selection of brown and yellow flax seed varieties with improved yields and disease resistance. Researches have also been working to develop genomic selection models for targeted traits, as well as developing an indoor pasmo screening method.

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That last one may be of particular interest for Manitoba producers, although flax area has taken a dive in the province in recent years.

In 2024, Statistics Canada reported only 40,300 acres of flax seeded in Manitoba. Between 2010-2015, Manitoba flax area averaged slightly less than 136,700 acres.

Pasmo, a seed-bourne disease that can cause premature ripening and reduces yield and quality, both in the grain and the straw, is more of an issue in the wetter eastern Prairies. Infection can happen early in the season, but rates get worse with wet periods in late summer and fall, according to Manitoba Agriculture. Lodging increases the risk.

It’s also a disease without a lot of varietal resistance or management options, except for rotation and early seeding.

Tar’an shared his findings at a DFCC research day in Saskatoon in early March. The renewed cluster is in its second year and will be ending in 2028.

The cluster’s focus is diverse crop research on flax, camelina, carinata, mustard and sunflowers.

A major accomplishment for the flax project’s first objective has been the identification of four new lines with potential: two brown and two yellow. Those will be included in flax co-op trials this year.

The next trials will take place at 18 sites across Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Alberta.

Tar’an said they used eight parent line crosses to create populations with a lot of variability.

“I’m very excited to have a yellow seed,” he said.

“Yellow seed flax has been kind of behind in the progress in genetics. From the yield, usually it’s not as high as brown seed. Now we have a couple lines that seem to be on par with the brown seed and above the check.”

Each line shows strong yield potential, disease resistance and a maintenance of good oil quality, Tar’an said.

One variety from the research has been approved for registration. It’s official name is FP2608, and the researcher noted that it has shown strong yields in the short Prairie growing season.

For the genomic selection research, a training population with core connections and new breeding lines was created. The lines were genetically characterized, had species-specific data characterized and included sampled data from 99 selected lines.

The team was able to create markers in the system to help select targeted traits that can be used in fostering resistance against diseases such as pasmo, fusarium wilt and powdery mildew. So far, the system has an accuracy of about 78 per cent when predicting potential yield and disease resistance of a line. Accuracy and trait information will improve as more data is updated, Tar’an said.

The work should not be confused with either gene editing or genetic modification, he added. It’s meant as a resource for breeders to use in conventional breeding, to help better choose which of their available lines would be best to cross for their next generation, given a particular goal.

When it came to indoor pasmo screening, creativity while sticking to the basics was key.

Tar’an and his team want to help catch the disease earlier. Pasmo doesn’t show up until maturity, near the end of the season. The team hopes its indoor method will both improve diagnosis and testing efficiency.

To test their methods, the researchers used speed breeding to have plants available at all growth stages for disease monitoring.

“With speed breeding, we expose the plants to high temperature (and) 22 hours of daylight, so then (it) forces the plant quickly into a flowering state.… The end goal here is (to see), can we do the screening at the seedling stage,” Tar’an said.

The process continues to show success, and Tar’an hopes mixing basic pathology with breeding techniques will ultimately prove a winning combination for pasmo screening.

Another project Tar’an has been working on is redesigning the plant structure of flax for better harvestability and seed production.

Tough, fibrous stalks make flax a notorious harvest headache for producers. However, Tar’an has a vision of a future flax variety that produces more bolls while also having weaker, more easily cut fibre in the stem.

To achieve that, he’s been crossing today’s species of flax with its wild ancestor, Linum bienne.

His trials have some reason for optimism. He’s now seeing a flax crop that’s shorter, with more branches and flowers.

About the author

Janelle Rudolph

Janelle Rudolph

Reporter

Janelle Rudolph is a Glacier FarmMedia Reporter based in Rosthern, Sask. Janelle Rudolph's love of writing and information, and curiosity in worldly goings-ons is what led her to pursue her Bachelor of Communication and Digital Journalism from Thompson Rivers University, which she earned in 2024. After graduating, she immediately dove headfirst into her journalism career with Glacier FarmMedia. She grew up on a small cattle farm near Rosthern, Sask. which has influenced her reporting interests of livestock, local ag, and agriculture policy. In Janelle’s free time she can be found reading with a coffee in hand, wandering thrift and antique stores or spending time with friends and family.

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