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Brought to you by The Mosaic Company
Soil-applied Aspire ® delivers both quick- and gradual-release boron to promote root elongation, all in a single granule. Aspire’s advantage
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The bottom line? FCC predicts crop input demand will be impacted by seeding decisions as producers adjust to weaker crop prices, tighter margins, and dry conditions.
» Read more
BROUGHT TO YOU BY: Inputs: The Podcast
Janos Botschner, lead investigator of cyber security capacity in Canadian agriculture with the Community Safety Knowledge Alliance, wants to ensure Canada’s farmers are informed and prepared for cyber threats.
» Listen now...
Wheat research across the country will receive crucial funding through the newly announced Canadian National Wheat Cluster, worth more than $20 million over five years.
» Read More...
Nominate an outstanding woman in Canadian ag before April 1. Since 2020, we’ve celebrated the achievements of women in Canada’s agriculture industry.
» Read more
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Join Dr. Jocelyn Smith, University of Guelph and Technical Solutions Agronomists from Bayer Crop Science in a free two-part webinar series on March 26th and 27th from 11 am – 12 pm ET, focusing on how you can prepare for a successful soybean and corn growing season. The speakers will discuss:
• Resistance management in corn
• Residual control of tough-to-manage weeds in soybeans
• Above- and below-ground insect protection in corn
• Managing pest pressure with the latest trait technologies
and more!
» REGISTER NOW
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A few Ontario growers are using bio-strip tillage to prepare a good seedbed for their next crop. Instead of mechanical strip tillage, they plant certain cover crop species that produce a similar – or perhaps better – strip for planting. Two Ontario researchers are comparing bio-strip tillage with other tillage options and assessing the effects on corn yields and the bottom line.
» Read more... |
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The microbes in and around an oilseed plant’s roots could be a resource for helping the plant deal with drought stress. That’s the concept behind a project led by AAFC-Saskatoon microbiologist Tim Dumonceaux. A plant’s root-associated microbial community is intimately linked to the plant’s growth, survival and productivity – like a single, interdependent unit.
» Read more... |
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