Canada
March 15, 2006
Reprinted with permission from Meristem Land and Science,
www.meristem.com
Western Canadian farmers can get a
preview of the latest crop lines headed their way in a new
report delivered out of the Prairie Registration Recommending
Committee for Grain (PRRCG) meeting in Banff, Alberta.
The Meristem Land and
Science 2006 PRRCG Report: Building Canada's New Strategy,
offers western Canadian farmers, industry and others a first
look at more than 30 of the latest new crop lines recommended to
become commercial varieties. It also provides an overview of
keynote presentations and panel discussions that tackled key
issues facing crop development in Canada.
"The PRRCG, like the crop
development system and Canadian agriculture as a whole, is in a
period of major transition," says Scott Duguid, PRRCG Chair. "At
this year's meeting, a primary focus was on ideas to support
Canadian agriculture in this emerging new era."
The crop lines recommended for
registration featured a range of important new production and
market benefits. Crop lines were recommended for wheat, rye and
triticale; oat and barley; pulse and special crops; and
oilseeds.
"With all the challenges facing
Canadian agriculture, a clear bright spot is the promise of new
crop varieties with improvements and innovations to support the
industry and shape a new, more prosperous future," says Brad
Brinkworth, Senior Editor with
Meristem. "At this year's PRRCG meeting, both the candidate
cultivars and the discussions reflected a growing emphasis on
traits to generate new market opportunities in a range of
important areas."
An overview of all the key
discussion and recommended crop lines is available in the new
report, which was produced by Meristem Information Resources,
Ltd., an independent, Calgary-based communications company. It
was sponsored in part by
Western Grains Research Foundation (WGRF), a major research
funding organization for farmers in Western Canada.
Among the many topics addressed
in the report, Dr. Gordon Dorrell, the now retired former
Assistant Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada's
Research Branch, discusses of the future of public variety
development. Despite a strong track record of success and proven
high investment value, public variety development in Canada has
grappled with determining its role and finding stable funding
support.
The report also delivers
highlights of a keynote panel discussion that featured leading
crop industry players discussing how Canada can build a research
strategy to remain competitive in agriculture.
The 2006 PRRCG Report is
developed as a service to western Canadian farmers, industry and
the broad stakeholders in Canadian crop development. Producers
and others can access the full report on the Meristem Land and
Science Web site,
www.meristem.com, or through the WGRF Web site,
www.westerngrains.com:
http://www.meristem.com/prrcg06/PRRCG2006.pdf |