Rules for seed blends used to control crop pests

In 2014, we amended the Seeds Regulations to provide greater consistency in how seed blends created to manage pests are graded, labelled and tagged.

The key changes to the Seeds Regulations

The amendments clarify that varietal blends intended for pest management in the major crop kinds

  • must identify all the plant varieties included in the blend on the official tag
  • may be graded in the same way as seed of a single variety
  • may have a Canada pedigreed grade name applied

There are changes to the requirements to keep the Pedigreed Seed Declaration for each lot of pedigreed seed.

  • Previously, Pedigreed Seed Declarations had to be kept for a minimum of two years for all seed lots
  • With these amendments, operators of registered seed establishments must now retain the Pedigreed Seed Declaration for the following time periods:
    • one year after the final disposition of a Certified status seed lot
    • two years after the final disposition of a Foundation or Registered status seed lot

Varietal blends of corn that are used for plant pest tolerance management have been exempted from the labelling requirements in subsection 23(f) of the Seeds Regulations. This is because these requirements are intended only for labelling blends of silage corn.

Labelling plant pest management varietal blends in the marketplace

The official seed tags attached to the seed packages indicate the names of all plant varieties in the blend.

For varietal blends of two or more varieties of Certified seed, the official tag indicates the two-digit seed year (July 1 to June 30), followed by the word "Blend." For example, "25-Blend."

Growing and certifying these varietal blends

The process varies according to the crop kind. For some crops, such as wheat, the different plant varieties are blended at high generations (Select or Foundation) and grown together as a blend. Blended Certified status seed are produced from a planting of pre-blended Registered status seed.

For other crop kinds, such as corn, separate lots of Certified status seed of the different varieties are mixed together by an approved conditioner before the seed is packaged and sold as blended Certified seed.

The variety developer specifies the proportion of each variety in the blend.

Including varieties of plants with novel traits in a plant pest management varietal blend

Plants with novel traits may only be used in these varietal blends when we specifically permit this use.