logo
Maritime cereal grain farmers get access to new warning system for fungal disease

Maritime cereal grain farmers get access to new warning system for fungal disease

CBCa day ago

Scientists on Prince Edward Island have created a new warning system to help Maritime farmers avoid a costly disease called fusarium head blight, which can decrease grain yields while contaminating the crop with toxins.
The Fusarium Head Blight Environmental Risk Forecast Tool can be found on the Atlantic Grain Council's website and is available to growers throughout the region.
"Fusarium head blight is a really devastating disease that occurs pretty much around the world in cereal-growing regions," said Adam Foster, a cereal and oilseed pathologist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada who's based in Charlottetown.
"Not only does it cause yield losses, like loss of harvest and seed, but it will also contaminate the grain with mycotoxins that can make it unsuitable for people and animals to actually eat if it gets to a high enough level."
The risk of disease is higher when the weather is warm and wet, Foster said, adding that tropical nights can make it a lot worse. Those are conditions that could become more common in the Atlantic provinces due to climate change, he said.
"What the forecast tool will actually do is examine weather over the last week and incorporate those factors into the models to… predict whether disease is likely to occur or not."
Management strategies
It's hard to predict at the beginning of any given growing season whether fusarium head blight will be a problem that year, Foster said. P.E.I. was hit particularly hard in 2023, resulting in a lot of grain being lost to the disease.
"By the time you actually see the disease, it's too late to act. So having a prediction tool actually tell you ahead of time gives you a little bit of early warning of what's to come," he said.
"With a proactive tool and other disease management practices… it is actually manageable."
Other management practices include selecting selectively bred varieties that are partially resistant to the fungus, having a diverse crop rotation, and using chemical fungicides or biological control agents to suppress the disease, Foster said.
A useful tool
Steven Hamill, a farmer in Newton, P.E.I., expects the wheat in his fields to start flowering next week. He thinks the new forecasting tool will be an asset.
"There's been years where there's thousands of acres that have been destroyed in the field or hauled out of bins, so there's huge economic impact in a bad year," Hamill said.
Hamill said he sprays his crops with fungicide every year as a preventative measure, but not all farmers do the same.
"Having the tool, I guess, will validate the decision… or help people make that decision if they don't use it every year," he said.
The timely application of fungicides, along with implementing measures that help prevent and suppress the disease, is the best approach when it comes to managing flusarium head blight, Hamill said.
The new forecasting tool adds another tool to the toolbox, he said.
"I think it's great to have the collaboration with scientists and farmers and, you know, get them in the field together and determine what problems there [are] and what solutions they can come up with."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘A landmark decision': advocates celebrate reform of health screening task force
‘A landmark decision': advocates celebrate reform of health screening task force

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

‘A landmark decision': advocates celebrate reform of health screening task force

Women in their 40s in Ontario can now book a mammogram without needing a doctor's referral. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Kimberly P. Mitchell/Detroit Free Press via AP) Advocates and doctors are applauding the recently released external expert panel report on the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care, which calls for modernization and reform of the task force. Some of the recommendations to modernize the task force include ensuring preventive health care remains up to date with evolving scientific data and applying it to guidelines in a timely manner, the inclusion of equity-centred perspectives, patient involvement, and collaboration with pre-existing guidelines to help eliminate disparities across the country. 'This is great news,' said Dr. Anna Wilkinson, a family physician and general practitioner-oncologist at The Ottawa Hospital, in a phone interview with 'They are saying that we need to modernize the task force, and I think that's because we're recognizing that we are kind of behind the times on our cancer screening guidelines and many of our other preventive health care guidelines.' Task force halted amid criticism The task force, which is responsible for developing preventive health guidelines like cancer screening across Canada, is an independent body that develops clinical guidelines for family doctors about screening and prevention measures for cancer and other diseases. The task force's work was halted last year following criticism of its proposed incoming breast cancer screening guidelines, which did not recommend mammography screening begin at age 40. Instead, it upheld its 2018 guidelines recommending screening begin at age 50, despite growing evidence and calls from numerous medical experts and organizations urging earlier screening in response to rising breast cancer rates among younger women. This prompted then-Health Minister Mark Holland to request that the Public Health Agency launch an external expert review panel, which began in October 2024, to recommend changes and improvements to the task force's structure, governance, and methodology for developing the guidelines. Dr. Wilkinson, one of the medical experts who advised the external review panel, says she is pleased the report acknowledges the need to modernize the task force. 'We cannot afford economically as a health system to not be,' she said. 'We know that it's so much cheaper to deal with cancers when they're smaller, we know the outcomes are better, the cost to our health-care system is better.' 'I think one of the ways forward for a health-care system is to do preventive care more effectively. (…) This is a high-level view of how we might do that, so I look forward to seeing how it gets implemented.' With implementation of the recommendations currently underway, Health Minister Marjorie Michel has requested that the Public Health Agency of Canada have the task force operational by April 2026. 'Landmark change' Kimberly Carson, CEO of Breast Cancer Canada, was one of many advocates calling for the incoming breast cancer guidelines to recommend screening begin at age 40 rather than 50. Carson, who met with Holland and the external expert review panel, is content with the report's findings. 'It's going to be fantastic for Canadians,' Carson told in a phone interview. 'We know that if we catch breast cancer early, it's better for the patient, it's better for the health-care system, it costs less, there's less financial toxicity for the patients and a better cure rate. (…) It changes the paradigm for Canadian patients.' The task force began meeting on the upcoming breast cancer guidelines in May 2023. For two years, Breast Cancer Canada advocated for the inclusion of subject matter experts in guideline development, the timely integration of the latest data, and the incorporation of patient perspectives. With the report acknowledging all these points, Carson says she is satisfied that the sustained mobilization efforts have yielded results. 'It's such a landmark change in a landmark decision,' Carson said. The Canadian Cancer Society, which also stated in a media release its approval of the report, also had its recommendations reflected in the findings. Some of these recommendations echo those of Breast Cancer Canada, including the inclusion of cancer experts, patient perspectives, and staying current with evolving perspectives, experiences and scientific evidence. 'Once they reform the task force and it becomes functional in April, we would hope that they would immediately take a look at the screening guidelines for breast cancer,' Carson added. In addition to the 2018 breast cancer guidelines, the current cancer screening guidelines for other cancers — like colon cancer (2016), prostate cancer (2014), and cervical cancer (2013) — are also due for updates, Dr. Wilkinson notes. She says this report is a 'critical step' towards modernizing all of Canada's screening guidelines. 'In today's strained health-care environment, optimizing preventive care is essential to making the most of our limited resources,' she said in an email to 'The integration of diverse and evolving evidence, equitable care and ongoing evaluation pave the way for agile, 'living' guidelines that keep pace with scientific advancements. 'This approach will help ensure Canada no longer relies on cancer screening recommendations that are over a decade old.'

Measles may be circulating in small northeast B.C. community, says health authority
Measles may be circulating in small northeast B.C. community, says health authority

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Measles may be circulating in small northeast B.C. community, says health authority

Northern Health officials have identified multiple confirmed cases of measles in the small northeast B.C. community of Wonowon since late May. It's also warning of an exposure at Fort St. John Hospital earlier this month. Wonowon is located around 90 kilometres northwest of Fort St. John, and is the site of the Halfway River First Nation reserve. The nation has a registered population of just under 300 people, and the Wonowon School says its student population comprises just under 60 kids. Members of the public have been warned to check for symptoms of the disease, which has been seeing a resurgence in Canada — particularly in Ontario, where officials have counted 2,046 confirmed and probable cases of measles as of May 31, and in Alberta. Northern Health says that it has found multiple lab-confirmed cases of the disease in Wonowon, though it did not share an exact number. As of May 31, Health Canada says B.C. has reported 12 cases of measles. "While it appears the initial case was travel-acquired, Northern Health Medical Health [officers] now believe the disease is circulating in the community," reads a statement from Northern Health. "Members of the public in Wonowon and neighbouring communities, including Fort St. John, may have been exposed in various settings in the community since late May." Northern Health adds that members of the public may have been exposed to the disease at the Fort St. John Hospital emergency area on June 2, between midnight and 4 a.m. local time. Measles is one of the most contagious diseases known to humankind. Symptoms can include a fever, coughing, a runny nose, and a blotchy red rash. While health officials say most people are immune to the disease due to prior vaccination or infection, they're advising members of the public to monitor for measles symptoms for up to three weeks, as it is spread through the air. In serious cases, measles can cause complications like inflammation of the brain, pneumonia and death. WATCH | How early can you get your child a measles shot? How early can you get your child vaccinated against the measles virus? 2 months ago Duration 3:49 Measles cases in B.C. remain low, with just five confirmed cases — all of them travel-related. But elsewhere, the numbers are exploding. Experts warn of further spread due to low vaccination rates. CBC's medical columnist, Dr. Melissa Lem, says she's been fielding questions from concerned parents. She says school-age kids are particularly vulnerable, and the virus can leave lasting damage to lungs and the immune system and even cause brain damage. They say that people at risk of getting the virus include those who have not been vaccinated against the disease or had a prior infection, with health officials across Canada saying that most of the cases they're seeing are in unvaccinated people. Two doses of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine or the measles, mumps, rubella and varicella (MMRV) vaccine offer almost 100 per cent effectiveness in the long term. The health authority is advising anyone in Wonowon who has been exposed to measles to call the Fort St. John Medical Clinic to book a vaccination. Officials are asking anyone who has a measles rash to self-isolate for at least four days if they're able. If anyone is experiencing severe symptoms, officials are asking them to call ahead before seeking health care so that doctors can prepare and prevent further disease spread.

Four universities call for measures to attract foreign researchers
Four universities call for measures to attract foreign researchers

CTV News

time4 hours ago

  • CTV News

Four universities call for measures to attract foreign researchers

The McGill University campus on Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2017, in Montreal. (The Canadian Press/Ryan Remiorz) Four Quebec universities are calling on the Quebec and Canadian governments to implement measures to attract foreign researchers in a 'global context marked by geopolitical instability.' Laval University, McGill University, the University of Montreal and the University of Sherbrooke stated in a press release issued on Saturday morning that at a time when 'political and social tensions are weakening the global research ecosystem,' Quebec and Canada have an opportunity to position themselves as a welcoming place for research. 'We are calling on governments to take swift action to seize the opportunities that this context of instability may bring for the benefit of Quebec and Canada. Other countries, particularly in Europe, have already invested significant resources in their universities to attract talent from around the world,' said Eugénie Brouillet, vice-rector of Research, Creation and Innovation at Laval University, in the same document. The four universities have released proposals that include a Quebec component and a federal component. The educational institutions suggest first creating new research chairs in strategic sectors, such as artificial intelligence, health and biodiversity, as well as offering targeted scholarships to recruit talented doctoral and postdoctoral students. The universities also propose supporting early-career researchers and investing in modern research infrastructure. 'Although some proposals target researchers based in the U.S., particularly Quebecers and Canadians pursuing careers there, the initiatives aim to attract talent from around the world, offering them a space of freedom of thought, scientific rigour, innovation and unparalleled creativity to advance their research,' the press release states. Since taking office, U.S. President Donald Trump has announced significant cuts in various fields of research, including health. This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French June 14, 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store