
Organic Connections Conference 2006 - Research Poster Winners' Abstracts
First Prize: Is organic spring
wheat breeding necessary?
Second Prize: Can
Annual Intercrops Help Control Weeds and Improve Productivity?
Third Prize: Can cultivar
choice and seeding rate increase competitive ability in organic spring
cereals?
First prize:
Is organic spring wheat breeding necessary?
Reid, T. A., A. Navabi, D. Spaner
University of Alberta, Edmonton AB
Abstract
Organic wheat producers in western Canada mainly use cultivars which
have been bred under conventional management systems or use older cultivars
released before the wide spread use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides.
We are conducting experimentation to investigate whether breeding
populations selected in later generations would differ between conventional
and organic management systems.
A population of 79 F6 recombinant inbred lines derived from a cross
between AC Barrie and Attila was grown with replication and eleven check
cultivars at two Edmonton AB sites (one organic) in 2005 and six sites
(three organic) throughout central AB in 2006.
Preliminary results (employing only grain yield as the primary selection
criteria) suggest the top 10% yielding lines differ between conventional
and organic sites.
Thus, selecting high yielding lines under conventional management may
not provide the highest yielding under organic management. These preliminary
results may suggest that the selection of “organic cultivars”
may be possible under organic management.
Second prize:
Can Annual Intercrops Help Control Weeds and Improve Productivity?
A.G. Nelson1, S. Quideau2, B. Frick3,
Jill Clapperton4 and D. Spaner1
1 Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, University
of Alberta, 2 Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta,
Edmonton, AB,
3 Organic Agriculture Centre of Canada at University of Saskatchewan,
4 Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Lethbridge, AB, T1J 4B1
Abstract
Weed control and low productivity continue to be issues in organic cropping
systems.
We examined the use of annual intercrops for weed suppression and yield
stabilization at four field sites in 2006. Monocrops of wheat, barley,
canola (Brassica napus) and field peas, and all intercrop combinations
that include wheat were grown in two conventional and two organic locations
in Edmonton, and New Norway, AB. Recommended seeding rates were used,
and adjusted according to the number of crops in the mixture.
Ability to compete as well as yields and land equivalent ratios (LER)
were determined using biomass and yield samples.
In both organic and conventional systems, the barley monocrop and intercrops
that included barley had significantly less weed biomass than other
treatments. Yields in the conventional systems were higher than in the
organic systems
However, some intercrops were found to improve overall productivity
in both systems of production. The intercrop treatments wheat:canola,
wheat:barley:canola, wheat:barley:peas and wheat:barley:canola:peashad
mean LER’s significantly higher than one. LER’s greater
than one mean indicate that more monocropped land would be needed to
achieve the intercrop yield. The intercrop treatments had similar LER’s
in both the organic and conventional systems.
Intercropping less competitive crops with a competitive crop like
barley can improve weed suppression and productivity above that of monocrops.
We will be examining the soil biology of intercropped systems in future
studies.
Third prize:
Can cultivar choice and seeding rate increase competitive ability in
organic spring cereals?
H. Mason1, A. Navabi1, B. Frick2,
J. O’Donovan3 and D. Spaner1
1Department of Agricultural, Food, and Nutritional Science, University
of Alberta, Edmonton, AB
2Department of Plant Sciences, University of Saskatchewan, 51 Campus
Drive, Saskatoon, SK
3Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Beaverlodge, Alberta
Abstract
Organically managed production systems often experience greater weed
pressure than their conventional counterparts, potentially causing yield
losses and increased weed seed build up. The use of competitive crop
cultivars and the cultural practice of increasing seeding rates may
moderate such production constraints.
Field trials were conducted at two organically managed locations in
Alberta, Canada for two years to determine the effect of cultivar and
seeding rate (300 and 600 seeds m-2) on the competitive ability and
agronomic performance of Canadian spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)
and barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Cultivars were selected based on their
differing heights, tillering capacities and times to maturity.
Competition from tame oats reduced grain yield by an average of 26%.
Barley cultivars were generally more competitive than wheat cultivars.
Height, early maturity and early season vigour were more closely associated
with weed suppression and yield maintenance than tillering capacity.
The modern semidwarf CDC Go was the highest yielding wheat cultivar,
but was a poor weed suppressor; the older and taller cultivars, Katepwa
and Park, combined the highest yield with the greatest weed suppression.
Doubling the seeding rate increased grain yield, weed suppression
and economic returns. This effect was not cultivar specific, which implies
that doubling the seeding rate may be a generally effective method of
overcoming yield losses and weed seed build up associated with increased
weed populations under organic production.