Clubroot in Winter Canola

Clubroot is a significant disease of canola in Western Canada and has been found in multiple fields and regions in Ontario. Once clubroot is established in a field it cannot be eradicated. Symptoms include galling of roots leading to wilting, stunting and yellowing of plants. Yield loss can range from 0-100% in areas of fields […]

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Pre-Harvest Herbicide Use for Winter Canola

A pre-harvest herbicide application is not required, and the crop can dry down naturally. However, winter canola is a high yielding crop with a lot of biomass and herbicides can facilitate direct harvest by drying down weeds and canola plants. Green plant material moving through the combine may cause harvest losses, and ease of harvest […]

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Winter Canola Storage

Canola is dry at 10% moisture but for long-term storage, seed moisture should be 8%–9%. The small seed size and high oil content results in rapid heating of stored canola. Heating in storage causes ‘heat damaged seed’ that has higher free fatty acids and rancidity problems. Heated seed can result in rejection by end users […]

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Pre-Harvest Herbicide Use for Spring Canola

A pre-harvest herbicide application is not required, and the crop can dry down naturally. The use of a herbicide does not hasten canola maturity but can facilitate direct harvest by drying down weeds and canola plants more quickly and evenly. Green plant material moving through the combine may cause harvest losses, and ease of harvest […]

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Direct Harvesting Spring Canola

Direct combining is the most common method of harvest in Ontario, followed by swathing, which still occurs in some areas. Direct combining usually results in improved seed quality compared to swathing, due to fewer fines and less green seed. Direct harvesting is most successful when the crop ripens evenly, is heavy, relatively free of Alternaria […]

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Spring Canola Swathing

Swathing is less common in Ontario than harvesting directly and is primarily conducted in Northern Ontario. Swathing may be beneficial in short-season areas or where a producer has a lot of canola acres to harvest because of the opportunity to harvest earlier. Swathing may offer more complete dry-down of plants and may be preferred on […]

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Spring Canola Storage

Canola is dry at 10% moisture but for long-term storage, seed moisture should be 8%–9%. The small seed size and high oil content results in rapid heating of stored canola. Heating in storage causes ‘heat damaged seed’ that has higher free fatty acids and rancidity problems. Heated seed can result in rejection by end users […]

Read More…

Clubroot in Spring Canola

Clubroot is a significant disease of canola in Western Canada and has been found in multiple fields and regions in Ontario. Once clubroot is established in a field it cannot be eradicated. Symptoms include galling of roots leading to wilting, stunting and yellowing of plants. Yield loss can range from 0-100% in areas of fields […]

Read More…

Slugs on Spring Canola

Slugs are a pest of both winter and spring canola. Their severity is influenced by crop residue; slugs shelter in residue and cause damage in no-till fields or areas of tilled fields that have residue on the surface. Damage has more often been observed in winter canola, likely because there is a greater appetite for […]

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