The three Prairie, provincial canola grower associations have evaluated and selected 11 canola research projects to receive funding under the Canola Agronomic Research Program (CARP) in 2025.
This investment includes over $2.3 million from Alberta Canola, SaskOilseeds and Manitoba Canola Growers, as well as over $764,000 from the Western Grains Research Foundation (WGRF) and over $363,000 from Results Driven Agriculture Research (RDAR), bringing the total investment to over $3.4 million.
CARP enables the funding of projects that are key to advancing canola productivity and mitigating production threats.
The funded projects regularly provide new strategies for managing pests and diseases, improving nutrient management and supporting a more resilient canola crop. Grower associations are pleased to collaborate with the WGRF and RDAR, enabling greater innovation and discovery through aligned research priorities.
“The research conducted under CARP is beneficial, not just because it is a well-leveraged investment, but because it delivers priority research initiatives for farmers,” says Nicolea Dow, MCGA Research Chair. “We are excited to once again be part of funding research under CARP and look forward to the advances and solutions this investment will deliver for canola farmers in the future.”
Canola research projects funded in the CARP 2025 intake include:
- Claudio Stasolla, University of Manitoba – Selection of canola germplasm with enhanced water use efficiency for tolerance to drought and heat
- Gavin Chen, University of Alberta – Developing heat- and drought-tolerant canola by regulating oil-associated enzyme: Phase two
- Hossein Borhan, AAFC Saskatoon – Genetic Insights from Pennycress: enhancing canola resistance to Verticillium longisporum
- Dwayne Hegedus, AAFC Saskatoon – Assessing fungicide sensitivity in S. sclerotiorum
- Steve Robinson, AAFC Saskatoon – Next generation insecticides: Novel RNAi targets for pollinator-friendly flea beetle control
- Rudolph Fredua-Agyeman, University of Alberta – Genome-wide association analysis to identify quantitative resistance to blackleg disease in canola
- Rob Duncan, University of Manitoba – Integrated flea beetle management for the future of canola production in Canada
- Hayley Brackenridge, AAFC Swift Current – Invasion potential of Palmer amaranth in Canadian Prairie agroecosystems
- Harmeet Chawla, University of Manitoba – Identifying novel genetic sources of resistance to verticillium stripe using synthetic Brassica napus lines
- R. Glen Uhrig, University of Alberta – Advanced proteome-centric artificial intelligence technology for clubroot pathotype identification and characterization
- Edel Pérez-López, Université Laval– Understanding the clubroot disease at the single cell level
Since 1994, over $34 million has been invested in canola research through CARP.
Source : Pembinavalley online