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Horticulture Specialist Researching Soilless Media and Biochar for Crop Production

An Oklahoma State University food crop expert is studying alternatives to peat moss in commercial and domestic vegetable crop production.

While peat is a common soilless media used for its ability to retain water and nutrients, it is also expensive because of the lengthy and extensive process required to obtain it. Peat is an organic material composed of partially decomposed plant matter that accumulates in wet environments like bogs over thousands of years.

“There has been a huge effort to improve sustainability in the green industry, and one of those efforts is to move away from peat moss, which holds water the best,” said Dr. Tyler Mason, assistant professor and urban horticultural food crop production systems Extension specialist. “But how it is produced and the time it takes to develop raise the question of whether it should be used. The industry uses a backhoe to extract the peat moss from areas that would otherwise remain undisturbed.”

Mason and master’s student Kristal Casey are evaluating ground-up hemp waste as a soilless alternative to peat for growing the edible flower nasturtium.

Source : okstate.edu

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Developing disease resistance in new wheat varieties

Video: Developing disease resistance in new wheat varieties


Dr. Colin Hiebert, research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada – Morden, is focused on developing new tools that wheat breeders can use to improve, diversify and strengthen disease resistance in new wheat varieties. This includes new genomic tools that address resistance to five diseases including: Fusarium head blight, leaf rust, stripe rust, stem rust and common bunt.

Learn more about how research conducted at AAFC-Morden will impact wheat variety development, production and profitability for the future. This research is part of the Canadian National Wheat Cluster and funding is provided through the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Alberta Grains, Sask Wheat, Manitoba Crop Alliance, Western Grains Research Foundation and Canadian Field Crop Research Alliance.