Trendy new wheat being studied for climate change potential in the Maritimes - Action News
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Trendy new wheat being studied for climate change potential in the Maritimes

A perennial wheat that has created a buzz around the world is being researched here in the Maritimes.

Kernza is a perennial wheat that grows back for multiple years after planting

A woman holds a handful of tall grass.
Brittany Cole at her Kernza plot on P.E.I.'s Harrington Research Station. Cole is doing a PhD project on the new wheatgrass. (Shane Hennessey/CBC )

A PhD student at Dalhousie University is growing a trendy new wheatshe says could be an option for Maritime farmers looking to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.

Kernza is a wheatgrass that has attracted the attention of celebrities and chefs around the world, inspiring new products including beer, whiskey, pasta and pancakes.There was even a"Kernza-Con" conference in Minnesota last month.

Brittany Cole first became interested in Kernza while working for the P.E.I. Department of Agriculture on a climate adaptation project.

Now, she's doinga PhD project on the wheat.

"It is a perennial, so it comes back every year and it has a really deep rooting system. That makes it more resilient to climate changesand extreme weather from year to year," Cole said.

A tall wheat in a test field at Harrington Research Station.
Kernza has attracted the attention of celebrities and chefs around the world, inspiring new products including beer, whiskey, pasta and pancakes. (Shane Hennessey/CBC )

"Adaptation-wise, it is going to have deeper roots. So in terms of holding the soil together, preventing soil erosion, longer lifespan, it's just better for less intensive agriculture on our land."

'It's a big deal'

Kernza was developed by The Land Institute, which is based in Kansas.

Cole is trying to determine how the wheat will grow in the Maritimes.

She said the topsoil here is not as deep as in the U.S. Midwest, but that she'susing a seed developed at the University of Manitoba which is more suited to a Canadian climate.

Cole will have her first harvest in a couple of weeks. She said she's excited to see what kind of yield she gets.

A woman walks through tall wheatgrass as seen from the drone
Brittany Cole walks through the test plots of Kernza at the Harrington Research Station. (Shane Hennessey/CBC )

"It's the first time it's ever been grown in Atlantic Canada and the Maritimes. So it's a big deal,to try something new and see how it does," she said.

"That's a big component of finding solutions for climate change. And with our extreme weather patterns, finding alternative options so that we can still keep feeding ourselves."

Reducing emissions

Cole said Kernzais a dual crop that can be cut as forage to feed livestock, and then harvested as a grain later in the season.

"You can keep it for longer. But in terms of the grain harvest potential, four years is kind of the best sweet spot for getting a good yield," she said.

Because it comes back formultiple years,thatmeans less plowing and tilling for farmers.

"It would certainly reduce the equipment greenhouse gas emissions, going out in the fields, the number of passes, your fuel consumption to do that," Cole said.

A sample of a wheatgrass called kernza is being put in a paper bag.
Cole will have her first harvest in a couple of weeks. (Shane Hennessey/CBC )

"It also has a carbon storage potential for the deep rooting system. And the fact that it's in the ground for several years,you're storing carbon for that time."

Cole's largest Kernza plot is at the Harrington Research Station in P.E.I. She also has sites at the Dalhousie Truro campus, the Fredericton Agriculture Canada station, and the Annapolis Valley.

Ultimately, she said would like to see the trial continue as a bigger project, but that it all depends on how well it does.

Cole would also like to see a variety oflocal products made with the Kernza grain, like beer.

They could be similar to whatPatagonia is already producing. The clothing company has developed beer andpasta made with Kernza.

Interest in new crops

A man stands in a field of tall wheatgrass
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada research scientist Aaron Mills is one of Cole's supervisors. He says there's a lot of interest in perennial crops in general. (Shane Hennessey/CBC )

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada research scientist Aaron Mills is one of Cole's supervisors.

"There's a lot of interest now in perennial crops in generalaround the worldto reduce the amount of plowing," Mills said.

"Every time we plow the soil, we break up the microbial community that's there. We open up the soil to erosion. There's carbon losses every time we plow the soil."

The Atlantic Grains Council andMitacs,areproviding financial support for thePhD project.

Grains Council research coordinator Alan Miller said producers are always looking for new crops to be able to diversify.

But he said there will still be more work to do if the research does show Kernza has potential.

If it does grow well here, then we have to look at what markets is it best suited for.Alan Miller, Atlantic Grains Council

"If it does grow well here, then we have to look at what markets is it best suited for," Miller said.

"The grain that you harvest is a little bit different than our traditional grain. So we would have to work on finding some unique markets for it. And on the forage side, it would be a big help for our livestock industry."