Search
Better Farming OntarioBetter PorkBetter Farming Prairies

Better Farming Ontario Featured Articles

Better Farming Ontario magazine is published 11 times per year. After each edition is published, we share featured articles online.


Taking a crack at hazelnut production

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Eastern filbert blight: A history

By Nicholas Van Allen

For many years, hazelnut farming has been confined to the Pacific Northwest – in places like Oregon, Washington State and British Columbia. But, with grower trials now underway in Ontario and new science, Ontario's hazelnut growers are on the cusp of major industry expansion.

In many ways, the evolution of hazelnut farming has been shaped by the presence of the eastern filbert blight, a canker disease which infects hazelnut trees.

Andrew Fuller, author of The Nut Culturist, a turn-of-the-twentieth-century American textbook on nut cultivation, wrote that he had witnessed the devastating effects of the eastern filbert blight in the mid- to late-nineteenth century.

He first attempted to grow hazelnuts on a small scale in the early 1860s and he had a crop within just a few years.

Fuller wrote positively of the hazelnut in the text, saying that, "In my own experience I have found no other nut tree … that has been more satisfactory. The plants come forward rapidly, fruiting freely and abundantly when young, and if properly trained, the crop can be gathered with little labor."

Despite this success, he also "noticed that an occasional shoot was affected with blight." And the year following, he saw that "more of the branches were affected, and from these the blight extended downward on the main stems."

Shortly after this observation, Fuller said that he knew his trees "were doomed."

The only method for controlling the blight was to "cut and burn the discarded stems" of affected hazelnut trees but this proved to not be enough for a curious breeder like Fuller.

While the blight does not kill trees immediately, since their roots remain and continue to send up new shoots, the disease renders plants unproductive within two or three years of initial infection.

North American varieties of hazelnut experience only insignificant cankers from the disease, according to a paper published in Plant Disease. European hazelnuts, in contrast, which produce fruit more suitable for production and processing, are seriously affected. "Expanding cankers girdle branches and limbs, resulting in canopy dieback … and death of trees in 5 to 12 years if diseased limbs are not removed," the study said.

Fuller's hazelnut trees were a European variety, having been brought to the United States from the United Kingdom. He remained convinced that the blight was what prevented widespread cultivation of hazelnuts in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains.

Over the next century, the Rockies remained a barrier to the spread of the eastern filbert blight. Hazelnut cultivation grew in the Pacific Northwest, Oregon and Washington in particular.

By the early 1970s, though, the blight was observed in western Washington State, having spread unnoticed in the late-1950s and 1960s.

In the 1980s, in order to save the northwestern hazelnut production from the blight, government and industry-supported research efforts began in earnest and they continue to this day.

hazelnuts

    Photo credit: Ontario Hazelnut Association photo

Thankfully, eastern filbert blight is a geographically slow-spreading disease, something which has given researchers time to conduct studies and adapt varieties in order to support continued hazelnut agriculture.

Today, efforts at research stations like the one in Simcoe, supported by the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs and the University of Guelph, are developing productive, disease-resistant varieties. BF

Current Issue

September 2024

Better Farming Magazine

Farms.com Breaking News

BASF introduces Surtain herbicide for field corn growers

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Field corn growers in eastern Canada have a new crop protection product available to them. After about 10 years of research and trials, BASF has introduced Surtain, a residual herbicide for corn that combines PPO inhibitor saflufenacil (Group 14) and pyroxasulfone (Group 15) in a premix... Read this article online

New home for the Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario

Saturday, September 14, 2024

The Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario (CFFO) has announced it has moved into its new office building in Ingersoll. Located at 274620 27th Line in Ingersoll, the new office will serve as the hub for CFFO’s ongoing efforts to advocate for and support Ontario’s Christian farmers.... Read this article online

Canadian Ag Youth Council Welcomes new Members

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada has announced the latest members to join the Canadian Agricultural Youth Council (CAYC). This update introduces nine fresh members alongside thirteen returning youths, marking a significant step towards involving young voices in agricultural... Read this article online

New CEO for Livestock Research Innovation Corporation

Friday, September 13, 2024

Livestock Research Innovation Corporation (LRIC) is promoting from within with the appointment of the organization’s newest Chief Executive Officer. Industry Services Manager Kelly Somerville has been tapped to assume the role as of September 3, replacing retiring CEO Mike McMorris.... Read this article online

BF logo

It's farming. And it's better.

 

a Farms.com Company

Subscriptions

Subscriber inquiries, change of address, or USA and international orders, please email: subscriptions@betterfarming.com or call 888-248-4893 x 281.


Article Ideas & Media Releases

Have a story idea or media release? If you want coverage of an ag issue, trend, or company news, please email us.

Follow us on Social Media

 

Sign up to a Farms.com Newsletter

 

DisclaimerPrivacy Policy2024 ©AgMedia Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Back To Top