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Food Scientist Wins Provincial Agri-Food Innovation Award

A University of Guelph professor who helped develop a new way to decontaminate produce is among the winners of the 11th annual Premier’s Awards for Agri-Food Innovation Excellence.

Premier Kathleen Wynne announced the awards, considered Ontario’s highest honour for innovative solutions supporting the agri-food industry, Tuesday in Toronto.

Prof. Keith Warriner, Department of Food Science, received a Leaders in Innovation Award along with Paul Moyer from Moyers Apple Products, based in Beamsville, Ont. The duo designed a forced-air ozone reactor, a chemical-free, waterless sanitizer for produce that reduces health risks and increases shelf life.

They developed the device for decontaminating fruit after a 2014 listeria outbreak linked to candy apples.

Warriner and Moyer also developed a process using ultraviolet light and hydrogen peroxide to decontaminate apples and other produce.

Their research was supported partly by the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs.

Warriner is a well-known food safety expert who has published more than 100 papers, book chapters and abstracts. He studies food safety in the meat processing and fresh-cut sectors, and has developed decontamination methods for salmonella and for products that can cause food-borne illness outbreaks.

The awards were presented during the annual Premier’s Agri-Food Summit. Held in Toronto, the event brought together industry leaders to discuss growth of the province’s agri-food sector through trade and collaboration. U of G president Franco Vaccarino moderated an innovation panel discussion during the event.

Source: Universityof Guelph


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Spring weed control in winter wheat with Broadway® Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam)

Video: Spring weed control in winter wheat with Broadway® Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam)

#CortevaTalks brings you a short update with Cereal Herbicides Category Manager, Alister McRobbie, on how to get the most out of Broadway® Star.

Significant populations of grassweeds, including ryegrass and brome, can threaten winter wheat yields. Spring applications of a contact graminicide, such as Broadway Star from Corteva Agriscience, can clear problem weeds, allowing crops to grow away in the spring.

Broadway Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam) controls ryegrass, sterile brome, wild oats and a range of broad-leaved weeds such as cleavers. It can be applied to winter wheat up until GS32, but the earlier the application is made, the smaller the weed, and the greater the benefit to the crop. Weeds should be actively growing. A good rule of thumb is that if your grass needs cutting, conditions are right to apply Broadway Star.