A lush green soybean field at sunset.

Soybeans hit with iron deficiency chlorosis

IDC was a widespread issue in soybean last year as diminishing soil moisture left salts higher in the soil profile

IDC was a widespread issue in soybean last year as diminishing soil moisture left salts higher in the soil profile

Iron deficiency chlorosis was one widespread soybean issue in 2024, agronomists reported during a panel at Manitoba Ag Days 2025




Justine Cornelson from BrettYoung Seeds speaks about verticillium at Manitoba AgDays in Brandon in January, 2025.

Researchers scramble to understand verticillium in Canada

Disease is a relative newcomer to Canada and has been the subject of little research globally

Justine Cornelson of BrettYoung Seeds says verticillium is one reason Manitoba saw disappointing canola yields last year. The disease needs to be the subject of more research, since little has been done to date.

Looking upward from the ground through a crop of green durum wheat plants.

Slight increase expected for durum acres

SWIFT CURRENT – Marlene Boersch isn’t buying what Agriculture Canada is selling. In its Outlook for Principal Field Crops, published in January, the department forecast a five per cent drop in durum wheat acres – going from 6.35 million seeded acres in 2024 to 6.05 million this year. Those estimates are too pessimistic, said Boersch, […] Read more


Agriculture Canada has talked before about getting out of wheat breeding, but researchers think this time there’s substance to the talk. | File photo

Wheat breeding faces ‘seismic shift’

The future of variety development is uncertain if Agriculture Canada changes focus

Glacier FarmMedia – The future of wheat breeding in Canada is on uncertain ground. Agriculture Canada may be moving away from field-ready wheat development and toward upstream research, attendees heard during Edmonton’s Crossroads Crop Conference late last month. The event featured a round table of four prominent wheat breeding figures, with an eye to what […] Read more

A close-up of liquid coming out in a fan-shaped pattern from a red sprayer nozzle.

Pest Management Regulatory Agency plans to reinstate lambda-cy use in feed grain crops

PMRA to update guidance, cancel some uses in fruit

Glacier FarmMedia – Canadian grain and oilseed growers who’d had to stop using insecticides such as Matador, Silencer and Voliam in 2023 for feed grain crops can expect to be able to use them again starting this spring. Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) on Monday (Feb. 3) announced a round of public consultations […] Read more

Ken Seitz speaks at the Nutrien funding announcement for the University of Saskatchewan Feb. 3.

Nutrien donates $15 million to U of S AgBio and Engineering

Nutrien has announced a $15 million donation to the University of Saskatchewan. It was announced Feb. 3 in the university’s Agriculture Building. Over the past 50 years, the company has invested more than $50 million in the university. The majority of funding will be for the establishment of the Nutrien Centre for Sustainable and Digital […] Read more