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Story Posted: June 16, 2010

Canola Watch 8: Take action on weeds and cutworms

In This Issue: Yellow canola: Wait for moisture stress to ease, Fertilizer top up in good conditions, Cutworm threat to extend into July, Tank mixing herbicides with insecticides, Questions and contacts.

Issues of the week
June 16, 2010 - Spraying delays due to wet fields, rain and wind have made for a "super weedy year." Prepare to spray twice and use rates appropriate to the weed size. Cutworm spraying is reported all across the Prairies, and the threat will continue for another week at least.

Crop and weather update
Peace (B.C. and Alberta): "It was a rough week," says CCC agronomy specialist Erin Brock (click to email Erin). Wind held up spraying. Cutworms are feeding "voraciously," with at least one grower having to spray 1,000 acres. And many parts of the region could use rain. Hard frost hit some areas, but canola seems to be recovering. Canola in general looks good, with the earliest fields approaching the bud stage.

Alberta: Many parts of southern Alberta are still dealing with excess moisture. Hardest hit was the Coronation area with another 4". North of Edmonton got little more than a tenth. With a couple days of heat in the past week, many Alberta canola fields went from 20% ground cover to complete canopy. Earliest seeded canola has moved past the 4-leaf stage. Read the Alberta crop report.

Saskatchewan: It's like two worlds. The west looks pretty good so far, with 99% of fields seeded and a good start for the crop. The east is deluged, with heavy rains again this week. CCC agronomy specialist Tiffany Martinka says around Melfort there is one acre underwater for every acre seeded. With final crop insurance deadlines this weekend, most acres unseeded as of today will remain unseeded. Read the Saskatchewan crop report.

Manitoba: In the west and northwest, 10% to 15% of acres are unseeded and likely won't get seeded with crop insurance deadlines passed. Many canola crops across the province are saturated and show moisture stress. Crystal City area had some hail, but at this early stage the canola should recover. Read the Manitoba crop report.

Quick Hitters
Timing of glyphosate application: Agronomists and retailers continue to get questions about spray timing for glyphosate on Roundup Ready canola. The answer: Anytime up to and including the 6-leaf stage of the crop. Applying at the cotelydon stage is OK. See your provincial guide to crop protection for more information. Click your province for a link to your guide: Alberta , Saskatchewan , Manitoba.

Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives has revised the glyphosate chart we attached to Canola Watch 3. Click here for the revised PDF file. If you printed out the original, replace it with the new version. The chart includes all glyphosate products available, including amount of active ingredient per litre, salt type and container size.

Mistaken diagnosis: Gophers ate 100 acres of canola around Sedgewick, Alta. The grower thought it might be cutworm, but with scouting discovered the real culprit. Strychnine baits and, in some jurisdictions, mix-it-yourself strychnine liquid is available for gopher control. Talk to your municipal or county office for options in your area.

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Sclerotinia risk: With all this moisture, many growers and retailers have asked us if that means a higher sclerotinia stem rot risk. It depends. Sclerotinia sclerotia do not tolerate saturated soils, so very wet conditions could reduce the apothecia germination and spore production from those fields. But in areas with good moisture and great yield potential, canola may be at higher risk. When flowering starts, use the CCC's Canola Disease Scouting & Risk Assessment Card to help determine whether a spray is warranted.

Ruts in the field: Wider tires and lower tire pressures can improve sprayer flotation and reduce rut depth, but if the operator doesn't have time to switch tires, then keep in mind the desired harvest direction before spraying a wet field. Make ruts parallel with the intended direction of travel for the swather and combine so growers can keep up their harvest speed.

Coming Event: CCC senior agronomy specialist Doug Moisey (click to email Doug)will lead a diagnostic tour June 22 at Lakeland Agricultural Research Association's site at Fort Kent, Alta. The tour runs from 12:00 to 3:00 and lunch is included. Call 780-826-7260 to register.

Coming Event: AAFC's research centre in Lacombe is hosting a canola research tour Wednesday, June 30 from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Pre-registration is required. Lunch is included. Click here for more information and to register.

Coming Event: The Crop Diagnostic School in Carman, Manitoba will run July 6 to 9 and July 12 to 16. Attendance for a number of those days is already full. Click here for more information and to register.

Yellow canola: Wait for moisture stress to ease
Canola under the stress of too much moisture will turn yellow, because roots starved for oxygen can't take up nutrients.Wait until the ground dries up and roots can get working again before rescuing the crop, In short, save your money until you know the crop will survive.

Topdressing fertilizer may help when new green leaves start growing and when good growing conditions return. Sulphur in the form of ammonium sulphate can provide an economic return when applied up to the bolting stage. Nitrogen applied past the 6-leaf stage is unlikely to provide an economic benefit.

Tissue tests to determine nutrient deficiency may be unreliable this year in areas suffering unusual moisture stress.

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Fertilizer top up in good conditions
Many canola regions have good conditions right now,growers who have better than usual canola growing conditions may consider a topdressing nitrogen if they didn't apply enough fertilizer to meet revised yield expectations. Growers in western Saskatchewan, eastern Alberta and the Peace regions should consider a dribble band of liquid nitrogen or broadcast ammonium sulphate before the 4-6 leaf stage. After that stage, the payoff from a nitrogen top up is reduced.

Growers may still see a benefit from the sulphur-nitrogen combination in ammonium sulphate. In western Saskatchewan, Clint Jurke (click to email Clint), CCC agronomy specialist has noticed sulphur deficiency in some canola this year, particularly in well-drained land where rains washed sulphur lower in the soil profile, below the depth shallow roots can access.

Field conditions critical: If canola is growing in excessively wet conditions, yellowing and purpling may be the result of moisture stress .But if soil conditions are good, discolouration may be the result of nutrient deficiency.

Factors to consider: Nitrogen topdressing can extend the vegetative period and delay crop maturity. Consider the calendar date and the fall frost risk when making a nitrogen top up decision.

As canola plants grow their roots will start to access sulphur reserves that moisture carried lower into the soil profile. Growers who have been applying recommended rates of sulphur may find that topdress may have a lower economic return than those who have cut sulphur rates.

Cutworm threat to extend into July
Growers all across the Prairies are spraying for cutworm. The 3 key species - redbacked, pale western and dingy - feed until they're an inch to inch-and-a-half long, the molting stage. Redbacked tend to feed longer in the season than the other two. Scott Meers, entomologist with Alberta Agriculture, says many cutworms are still under an inch long, for the most part, and "the worst might not be over" for some regions.

Assessing the risk: Cutworms tend to be more numerous on fields that had a lot of green and growing plants (including weeds) the previous fall, and that had been in pulses the year before. Cutworms can reach economic levels regardless of the previous crop. Scout all your canola fields.

Crop damage: Look for cut, wilted or missing canola plants. Cutworms are often in patches, so spot spraying affected acres may be enough. Evening spraying is optimal as cutworms come closer to the surface at night. Morning sprays are less effective as cutworms move deeper at first light of day. For more scouting and spraying tips, click here for a MAFRI factsheet.

Check insecticide labels to make sure a product works on cutworms.

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Tank mixing herbicides with insecticides
Timing needs to be right for both the weeds and the insect. Presently there are no insecticide tank mixes registered for glyphosate, Liberty or Odyssey for applications in canola. Recent PMRA guidelines advise that any tank mixing products that are registered for use in canola is acceptable - even if the tank mix itself isn't registered. Click here for a link to registered tank mixes, taken from the Saskatchewan Guide to Crop Protection.

 

Questions and contacts
If you have general questions about Canola Watch, direct them to Jay Whetter, whetterj@canolacouncil.org or 807-468-4006.

If you have questions on regional issues, contact one of the following Canola Council of Canada regional agronomists or provincial oilseed specialists:

This report is supported by each of the provincial canola grower associations. For more information on some of their activities, check out the following links:

  • The Alberta Canola Producers Commission (ACPC) has a free e-newsletter called Alberta Canola Connections. Visit canola.ab.ca and click the sign-up icon on the right site of the homepage.
  • In Manitoba, sign up for the Manitoba Canola Growers Association newsletter at Canola Growers E-update by visiting www.mcgacanola.org.

 

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