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PhD student launches farming survey on cover crops

A PhD student from the University of Manitoba wants to engage with farmers from Haliburton County to gather information for a study he’s working on focusing on the use of cover crops across Ontario.
 
A PhD student from the University of Manitoba wants to engage with farmers from Haliburton County to gather information for a study he’s  working on focusing on the use of cover crops across Ontario.
 
 
 
 
Callum  Morrison has dedicated the past two years of his life towards  investigating cover crops and the potential benefits they provide both  to farmers and the environment. Cover crops are generally planted to  cover soil in a farmer’s field rather than for the purpose of being  harvested.
 
 
 
 
“This is a really important study, because cover crops  are an expanding area of interest,” Morrison told the Echo. “They have  tremendous potential to benefit the environment and soils. Governments  are starting to watch and take notice too of farmers that are using  cover crops. Down in the States, the government is actually  incentivizing cover crop use… That could be something we eventually  start to see [in Canada] too.”
 
 
 
 
In an effort to hear how Ontario  farmers are using cover crops, Morrison launched an online survey via  SurveyMonkey to gauge responses. At the time of speaking with the Echo,  Morrison had received responses from 416 farmers. The survey will be  available online until April 2.
 
 
 
 
There are only two regions in which Morrison has not yet had a response – Muskoka and Haliburton County.
 
 
 
 
“It’s  important for us to engage with all types of stakeholders in the  industry across all regions. The north is a region that is important.  Haliburton and Muskoka, the farmers and the information they have  possess great value to the study,” Morrison said. “If I’m doing research  into Ontario, I can’t exactly miss out part of Ontario.”
 
 
 
 
By the  time he’s done, Morrison hopes to have engaged with at least 30 farmers  from all regions. Far from acting as a lone agent, his study has been  backed by 13 different organizations and associations across the  province, including the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, Grain Farmers  of Ontario, the Ecological Farmers of Ontario, the Ontario government  and the Ontario Soil Network.
 
 
 
 
This latest survey follows in the  footsteps of a similar project he carried out in western Canada last  year, covering parts of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Upon  completion of his survey in Ontario, he intends to study the data  compiled in both and provide separate reports to industry leaders.
 
 
Some  of the information he’s received already has been quite interesting,  Morrison notes, with only four per cent of farmers who participated in  the survey and reported planting cover crops saying they saw a decrease  in profits after doing so.
 
 
 
 
Around 30 per cent of farmers reported  seeing no change, 30 percent said they saw a slight profit and 10  percent stated they saw a significant profit.
 
 
“While the profits are  nice, we’re hearing all sorts of other benefits that farmers are  experiencing as a result of planting cover crops. The big one we’re  hearing over and over again is general improvements to soil health,”  Morrison said. “We’re also hearing reports of reduced erosion, increased  soil organic matter, reduced compaction, increased nitrogen, less  weeds, more earthworms and some farmers are even saying they need less  tillage.”
 
Despite that, Morrison is adamant he is not necessarily an advocate for cover crops.
 
 
 
 
“I  don’t want to say if you grow cover crops you will see financial  benefits, necessarily. What I’m doing here is not trying to prove cover  crops are great, instead just prove what they are,” Morrison said.
 
 
 
 
At  this stage, he just wants to hear from as many farmers as possible to  provide a more well-rounded and complete analysis of the use of cover  crops in Ontario.
 
 
 
 
“I want to hear from people who have grown  cover crops and those who haven’t. Their farms can be of any size and  any kind. They can be organic, non-organic, fruit and vegetables,  livestock, grain – we just want to hear from farmers to expand our  knowledge of cover cropping practices in Ontario,” Morrison concluded.
 
 
 
 
For more information, or to access the online survey, visit surveymonkey.com/r/ontariocovercrop.