Glacier FarmMedia – Producers have a new website to bookmark if they’re looking for weed information on the Prairies.
The Western Grains Research Foundation has announced the official launch of their weed monitoring hub, prairieweeds.com. The website will be the new digital host for resources, data, weed maps and research under the Prairie Weed Monitoring Network (PWMN)—a joint initiative between provincial and federal governments and weed experts.
In a recent release, project leaders Charles Geddes and Julia Leeson from Agriculture and Agri-food Canada said the PWMN is “designed to be a pioneering initiative that will implement an all-inclusive weed biovigilance strategy” for the Prairies.
Grain movement through the St. Lawrence Seaway was up by five per cent in 2023 compared to the previous year, with Canadian wheat accounting for well over half of all the grain moved, according to a joint report from the Canadian St. Lawrence Seaway Management Corporation (SLMC) and the United States Great Lakes St. Lawrence Development Corporation (GLS) released May 27.
The new website will offer “a wealth of resources and up to date information on weed abundance, herbicide resistance and integrated weed management specific to the Canadian (P)rairies,” said Geddes.
The PWMN builds on the kind of work done by both the Prairie Pest Monitoring Network and the Prairie Crop Disease Monitoring Network. The goal is a co-ordinated effort to raise awareness around the weeds and facilitate better identification, scouting and assessement.
“Prairieweeds.com will be a great resource for farmers, agronomists and researchers,” said Laura Reiter, Western Grains Research Foundation chair. “The website is a great opportunity to provide the agricultural industry with the information required to manage weeds effectively, anticipate new threats, and mitigate herbicide-resistant weeds.”
Supporting names behind the PWMN include Agriculture and Agri-food Canada, Alberta Grains, Alberta Canola, SaskCanola, Saskatchewan Wheat Development Commission, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers, Manitoba Crop Alliance, Manitoba Pulse and Soybean Growers, Manitoba Canola Growers Association and Prairie Oat Growers Association.
Source: Farmtario.com