±«Óãtv

 

Field Crops

Optimizing productivity and sustainability in a turbulent environment

The environmental and economic sustainability of organic field crop production is closely connected with diversified and well-planned cropping rotations that maintain soil fertility and manage pests (weeds, insects and diseases) without the use of synthetic inputs. OSCIII OSC3 will generate new knowledge and innovative practices for Canadian organic field crop production. Specifically, Research Activities will examine:

  • The development of new cultivars of soybeans, wheat, oats, potatoes, and winter cereals specifically suited for organic and low-input production.
  • The optimization of rotational production systems for organic field crop production, with focus on whole systems, as well as the production of organic oats, wheat, corn and soybeans.
  • Activity 2 – Development of breeding strategies for organic soybean production systems in Canada.

  • Activity 3 – Evaluation of farmer-selected wheat, oat and potato genotypes under organic production in Eastern and Western Canada.

  • Activity 4 – Efficacy of using cover crops in 2 of the 3 growing seasons on nitrogen supply in an organic soybean-winter wheat-corn rotation.

  • Activity 5 – Organic oat breeding: oat cultivars specifically developed for organic production systems in Canada.

  • Activity 6 – Breeding of winter cereals to benefit no-till organic production systems.

  • Activity 7 – Optimizing yield and resilience of organically grown milling oat.

  • Activity 8 – The right balance: management strategies for plugging organic soil health constraints and moving forward.

  • Activity 9 – Diversified cropping strategies to improve sustainability of organic crop production in the Brown soil zone.

  • Activity 10 – Agronomic performance, resilience and baking quality of wheat cultivar mixtures adapted to organic management in Eastern Canada.