Manitoba Crop Variety
Evaluation Trials (MCVET)

MCVET is Manitoba’s independent, third-party crop variety evaluation program. We provide unbiased, province-wide yield and performance data that helps producers and the seed industry compare varieties across Manitoba’s growing regions.

Committee Members

The MCVET committee is made up of producers, plant breeders, government staff, seed industry representatives and commodity association members who work diligently to ensure crop variety data provided to producers is accurate and unbiased.

Jennifer
Seward

MCVET Chair
Executive Director,
Manitoba Seed Growers’ Association

Dennis
Lange

Seed Manitoba Co-Editor
Provincial Pulse Specialist,
Manitoba Agriculture

Sonia
Wilson

Seed Manitoba Co-Editor
Oilseeds Specialist,
Manitoba Agriculture

Brent
McCallum

Plant Pathologist,
Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada

Curt
McCartney

Associate Professor,
Department of Plant Science
University of Manitoba

Blye Sissions

Provincial Director
Manitoba Seed Growers’ Association

Brad
Pinkerton

Manitoba Marketing Rep,
SeCan

Paul
Gervais

Senior Research Agronomist,
Nutrien

Jennifer
McCombe-Theroux

Regional Variety Trial Agronomist, Manitoba
Pulse & Soybean Growers
(On Maternity Leave)

Terry
Buss

Regional Variety Trial Agronomist, Manitoba
Pulse & Soybean Growers
(Interim)

Andrew
Hector

Agronomy Extension Specialist –
Cereal Crops,
Manitoba Crop Alliance

Advisors

Uzzal Liton

Research and Innovation Specialist,
Manitoba Agriculture

Anne Kirk

Cereal Specialist,
Manitoba Agriculture

Callum Morrison

Crop Production Extension Specialist, Forages,
Manitoba Agriculture

What MCVET Delivers

MCVET delivers independent, standardized trials with province-wide coverage, broad crop diversity, and decision-ready performance metrics to guide variety selection across Manitoba.

Note: Some agronomic, disease, and quality data in Seed Manitoba are not collected by MCVET every year; they come from variety registration trials across Western Canada and are included to round out each variety profile.

Planning

(January-February)

January:

Annual planning meetings determine trial types, number of trials, and site locations.

 

Late February:

A call for entries generates lists of new and current varieties.

 

Randomization & replication:

Entries are randomly placed within replicated field trials (3 reps) to reduce variation from topography, texture, fertility, and other factors.

Seed Source & Preparation

(March–April)

Seed supply: Seed companies and breeding institutions ship bare seed to the co-operator for treatment and packaging (starting late March).

 

Treatment: Seed treatment reflects current industry standards.

 

Packaging: Amount per entry depends on plot size, germination, and thousand kernel weight. Plot sizes range from 8–16 m² across the province.

 

Logistics: Seed is shipped to trial co-operators in the last week of April.

Planting & In-Season Checks

(May–August)

Timing: Co-operators plant trials at a similar time to local producers for regionally relevant data.

 

Early-season tour (early July): Manitoba Agriculture staff verify stand establishment, planting quality, and early weed control.

 

Issues are corrected promptly: severely affected plots may be treated as missing in analysis, or entire trials may be terminated if necessary.

 

Pre-harvest tour: Confirms maintenance quality and checks for issues from herbicides, weeds, wildlife, or seeding errors (e.g., verifying awned vs. awnless placements).

Harvest & Data Processing

(Maturity to Post-Harvest)

Harvest: Plots are individually combined, bagged, and tagged once all varieties mature.

 

Moisture & cleaning: Moisture is measured for each sample; samples are cleaned and weighed (g/plot or kg/ha).

 

Standardization: Yield data are adjusted to target moisture before analysis, then converted to producer-friendly units (e.g., wheat bu/acre).

 

Quality testing: Performed on clean samples (e.g., protein for wheat, oil for oilseeds).

Protocols & Site Selection

Standardized protocols: Co-operators receive plot randomizations, workbooks, and protocols covering site selection, seeding, maintenance, weed control, and harvest.

 

Site criteria:

    • At least 30 m from tree lines
    • Level, uniform field area
    • Proper rotation (no volunteers of the same crop type)
    • No residual herbicides that could impact plots
    • Producer fields with the same crop type are preferred so fertilizer/chemical regimes match the surrounding crop.

Fungicide Policy:

No fungicides are applied. MCVET measures genetic potential and avoids introducing variation from fungicide timing across many varieties (e.g., 45 wheat varieties).

How the Trials Work

Frequently Asked Questions

Planning starts in January each year. Trial types, locations, and entry lists are confirmed by late February, followed by randomization and replication.

 

MCVET typically evaluates ~23 crop types every year across multiple locations. The number of sites depends on crop adaptation within Manitoba.

No. To measure genetic potential consistently, fungicides are not applied.

Sites must be uniform, follow proper rotation, be free of problematic residues, and meet spacing and layout requirements per MCVET protocol.

Thank you to MCVET Sponsors and Supporters in 2025

MCVET gratefully recognizes the support and financial contribution of the following organizations: 

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Alliance Seed

Canada-Manitoba Crop Diversification Centre

CANTERRA SEEDS

FP Genetics

Manitoba Agriculture

Manitoba Beef Producers

Manitoba Crop Alliance

Manitoba Pulse & Soybean Growers

Manitoba Seed Growers’ Association

Nutrien Ag Solutions

Parkland Crop Diversification Foundation

Prairies East Sustainable Agriculture Initiative

Richardson International – Kelburn Farm

SeCan

Seed Depot

SeedNet

Seed World Group

University of Manitoba

UPL AgroSolutions Canada

Westman Agricultural Diversification Organization

MCVET would also like to express its gratitude to:

South Interlake Crop Testing Committee (SICTC) and Crop Research Organization Portage (CROP) for locally organized variety trials.

University of Saskatchewan for seed preparation and randomization of flax trials.

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