Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-jbqgn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-18T23:14:11.799Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Trawling the Ocean of Grass: Soil Nitrogen in Saskatchewan Agriculture, 1916–2001

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2021

Laura Larsen*
Affiliation:
Independent Researcher

Abstract

Using a socioecological metabolism approach to analyze data from the Census of Agriculture, this article examines the underlying soil fertility of two case study areas in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan through the calculation of soil nitrogen balances. The Rural Municipalities of Wise Creek and Livingston are 300 miles apart and therefore have different topography, soil types, and rainfall levels, even though both are within the northern Great Plains. Over 85 years, from first settlement in the 1910s until the beginning of the twenty-first century, Wise Creek agriculture focused increasingly on livestock production while in Livingston farmers began to grow a greater variety of crops, most notably incorporating canola into rotations. Despite the differences between the two case studies, the pattern of soil nitrogen losses was remarkably similar, with biomass yields declining along with soil nitrogen. The addition of chemical nitrogen fertilizers since the 1960s did not produce yields matching historic highs, nor did a renewed focus on livestock. Wise Creek and Livingston showed two different responses to declining yields, but neither one ultimately provided a long-term solution to the problem of soil nutrient depletion and consequent productivity declines.

Type
Special Issue Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Social Science History Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbasi, Saima (2014) “Adaption to drought in Saskatchewan rural communities: A case study of Kindersley and Maidstone, Saskatchewan.” MA thesis, University of Saskatchewan.Google Scholar
Agricultural Supplies Board (1942) “Canada urgently needs more wool.War-Time Production Series 65: 14, www.publications.gc.ca/site/eng/9.802397/publication.html Google Scholar
Bierderbeck, V. O., Campbell, C. A., Bowren, K. E., Schnitzer, M., and McIver, R. N. (1980) “Effect of burning cereal straw on soil properties and grain yields in Saskatchewan.Soil Science Society of America Journal 44 (1): 103–11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blumenthal, Jürg M., Baltensperge, David D., Cassman, Kenneth G., Mason, Stephe C., and Pavlista, Alexander D. (2008) “Importance and effect of nitrogen on crop quality and health,” in Hatfield, J. L., and Follett, R. F. (eds.) Nitrogen in the Environment: Sources, Problems, and Management, 2nd ed. Elsevier: 5170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Briggs, A. (1947) “The framework of the wool control.Oxford Economic Papers 8: 1845.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brisson, Yan (2014) The Changing Face of the Canadian Hog Industry. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Britnell, George, and Vernon, Fowke (1962) Canadian Agriculture in War and Peace, 1935–50. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Busch, Lawrence (2003) “Canola: A Cinderella story,” in Harry Diaz, JoAnn Jaffe, and Robert Stirling (eds.) Farm Communities at the Crossroads: Challenge and Resistance. Canadian Plains Research Centre: 45–51.Google Scholar
Butler, William Francis (1872) The Great Lone Land: A Narrative of Travel and Adventure in the North-west of America. Sampson Low, Marston, Low & Searle, www.peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/638.html Google Scholar
Campbell, C. A., Zentner, R. P., Janzen, H. H., and Bowren, K E. (1990) Crop Rotation Studies on the Canadian Prairies. Research Branch Agriculture Canada.Google Scholar
Canadian Soil Information Service (2013) “Detailed Soil Surveys,” https://sis.agr.gc.ca/cansis/nsdb/dss/index.html (last modified April 18).Google Scholar
Canola Council of Canada (2017a) “First double-low variety registered,” Good as Gold: Celebrating 50 Year of Canola, www.canolahistory.ca/ Google Scholar
Canola Council of Canada (2017b) “First identification of low-erucic trait and transfer to B. napus.” Good as Gold: Celebrating 50 Year of Canola, www.canolahistory.ca/ Google Scholar
Church, Gordon (1985) An Unfailing Faith: A History of the Saskatchewan Dairy Industry. Canadian Plains Research Center.Google Scholar
Cunfer, Geoff (2004) “Manure matters on the Great Plains frontier.Journal of Interdisciplinary History 34 (4): 539–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunfer, Geoff (2015) “Soil fertility on an agricultural frontier: The US Great Plains, 1870–2000.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Environmental History, Washington, DC, March 19.Google Scholar
Cunfer, Geoff, and Fridolin, Krausmann (2016) “Adaptation on an agricultural frontier: Socio-ecological profiles of Great Plains settlement, 1870–1940.Journal of Interdisciplinary History 46 (3): 355–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cusso, Xavier, Ramon, Garrabou, and Enric, Tello (2006) “Social metabolism in an agrarian region of Catalonia (Spain) in 1860 to 1870: Flows, energy balance and land use.” Ecological Economics (59): 49–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1918) Census of Prairie Provinces: Population and Agriculture, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, 1916. J. de L. Tache.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1931) Census of Canada: Agriculture. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1936) Seventh Census of Canada, 1931, Vol. 7, Agriculture. J. O. Pateneude.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1941) Census of Canada: Agriculture. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1951) Census of Canada: Agriculture. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1961) Agricultural Census. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1962) The Fertilizer Trade. Roger Duhamel.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1972) The Fertilizer Trade. Roger Duhamel.Google Scholar
Dominion Bureau of Statistics (1982) The Fertilizer Trade. Roger Duhamel.Google Scholar
Easter, Wayne (2005) Empowering Canadian Farmers in the Marketplace: A Report to the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food. Government of Canada, www.agr.gc.ca/cb/min/pdf/rpt0705_e.pdf Google Scholar
Environment Canada (2017a) “Historical data,” Historical Data–Climate–Environment and Climate Change Canada, www.climate.weather.gc.ca/historical_data/search_historic_data_e.html Google Scholar
Environment Canada (2017b) “Top weather events of the 20th century,” Environment Canada, www.ec.gc.ca/meteo-weather/default.asp?lang=En&n=6A4A3AC5-1#1961-1980 Google Scholar
Fischer-Kowalski, Marina, and Helmut, Haberl, eds. (2007) Socioecological Transitions and Global Change: Trajectories of Social Metabolism and Land Use. Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowke, V. C. (1957) The National Policy and the Wheat Economy. University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friesen, Gerald (1984) The Canadian Prairies: A History. University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
García-Ruiz, Roberto, Manual, González de Molina, Gloria, Guzmán, David, Soto, and Juan, Infante-Amte (2012) “Guidelines for constructing nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium balances in historical agricultural systems.” Journal of Sustainable Agriculture 36 (6): 650–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Government of Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture (2008) Agricultural Burning–FAQs. Government of Saskatchewan.Google Scholar
Government of Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture (2016) “Crop yields by rural municipality,” www.agriculture.gov.sk.ca/Default.aspx?DN=5e3d0f74-ef7a-49f5-a975-f340e11fa394 Google Scholar
Government of Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture (2019) “Nitrogen fertilization in crop production,” www.publications.gov.sk.ca/documents/20/84107-Nitrogen%20Fertilization%20in%20Crop%20Production%20-%2002-17.pdf Google Scholar
Gupta, S. K., and Aditya, Pratap (2007) “History, origin, and evolution.” Advances in Botanical Research (45): 1–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guzmán, Gloria, Eduardo, Aguilera, David, Soto, Antonio, Cid, Juan, Infante, Roberto García Ruiz, Antonio, Herrera, Inmaculada, Villa, and Manuel, González de Molina (2014) Methodology and Conversion Factors to Estimate the Net Primary Productivity of Historical and Contemporary Agroecosystems, DT-SEHA n. 1407. Sociedad Espanola de Historia Agraria Documentos de Trabajo.Google Scholar
Jaffe, JoAnn (2003) “Family labour processes, land, and the farm crisis in Saskatchewan,” in Harry Diaz, JoAnn Jaffe, and Robert Stirling (eds.) Farm Communities at the Crossroads: Challenge and Resistance. Canadian Plains Research Centre: 137–48.Google Scholar
Jaska, Arunas, Lawrence, Busch, and Feng Huang Wu (1997) “Producing genetic diversity in crop plants: The case of Canadian rapeseed, 1954–1991.Journal of Sustainable Agriculture 9 (4): 523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karagiannis, Giannis, and Hartley Furtan, W. (1990) “Inducted innovation in Canadian agriculture: 1926–87.Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics 38 (1): 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lew, Byron (2000) “The diffusion of tractors on the Canadian prairies: The threshold model and the problem of uncertainty.Explorations in Economic History 37 (2): 189216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacGregor, R. J., and Graham, J. D. (1988) “The impact of lower grains and oilseeds prices on Canada’s grains sector: A regional programming approach.Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics 36 (1): 5167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacPherson, Ian, and John Herd, Thompson (1992) “The business of agriculture: Prairie farmers and the adoption of business methods, 1880–1950,” in Douglas Francis, R. and Howard, Palmer (eds.) The Prairie West: Historical Readings. Pica Pica Press: 475–96.Google Scholar
Magnan, André (2016) When Wheat Was King: The Rise and Fall of the Canada-UK Grain Trade. UBC Press.Google Scholar
McManus, Curtis (2011) Happyland: A History of the “Dirty Thirties” in Saskatchewan, 1914–1937. University of Calgary Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mosaic Crop Nutrition (2016) “Efficient fertilizer use guide: Nitrogen,” Mosaic Crop Nutrition, www.cropnutrition.com/efu-nitrogen Google Scholar
Nelson, Philip J. (1997) “To hold the land: Soil erosion, agricultural scientists, and the development of conservation tillage techniques.Agricultural History 71 (1): 7190.Google Scholar
Nicholson, Karen (2002) The Dairy Industry in Manitoba 1880–2000. Government of Manitoba.Google Scholar
Saskatchewan Advisory Committee on Agricultural Services (1933) Guide to Saskatchewan Agriculture. Department of Agricultural Extension, University of Saskatchewan.Google Scholar
Saskatchewan, Legislative Assembly (1980) Debates and Proceedings of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan, April 24, www.docs.legassembly.sk.ca/legdocs/Legislative%20Assembly/Hansard/19L2S/800424Debates.pdf Google Scholar
Saskatchewan Soil Survey, Saskatchewan Centre for Soil Research, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan Agriculture and Food, Canada-Saskatchewan Green Plan Agreement, and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (1989) Rural Municipality of Wise Creek, Number 77 May 1, 1989, Preliminary Soil Map and Report. University of Saskatchewan Centre for Soil Research.Google Scholar
Saskatchewan Soil Survey, Saskatchewan Centre for Soil Research, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan Agriculture and Food, Canada-Saskatchewan Green Plan Agreement, and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (1994) Rural Municipality of Livingston, Number 331, May 1, 1994, Preliminary Soil Map and Report. University of Saskatchewan Centre for Soil Research.Google Scholar
Sawyer, Colleen (2017) “Sheep farming and industry,” Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan, www.esask.uregina.ca/entry/sheep_farming_and_industry.html Google Scholar
Seaborne, Adrian (2001) “Crop diversification in Canada’s breadbasket: Land use changes in Saskatchewan’s agriculture.Geography 82 (2): 151–58.Google Scholar
Shepard, R. Bruce (2011) “Tractors and combines in the second state of agricultural mechanization on the Canadian plains,” in Marchildon, Gregory P. (ed.) Agricultural History. Canadian Plains Research Centre: 167–86.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada (1971) Agricultural Census. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada (1981) Agricultural Census. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada (1991) Agricultural Census. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada (2001) Agricultural Census. Statistics Canada.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada (2013) “2001 Community Profile.Statistics Canada Google Scholar
Statistics Canada (2016) “Snapshot of Canadian agriculture: Chapter 1.” Statistics Canada, www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/95-640-x/2011001/p1/p1-01-eng.htm Google Scholar
US Department of Agriculture (2016) Grain: World Markets and Trade, www.apps.fas.usda.gov/psdonline/circulars/grain.pdf Google Scholar
Waiser, Bill (2005) Saskatchewan: A New History. Fifth House.Google Scholar
Zentner, Robert, Wall, David D., Nagy, Cecil N., Smith, Elwin G., Young, Doug L., Miller, Perry R., Campbell, Con A., McConkey, Brian G., Brandt, Stewart A., Lafond, Guy P., Johnston, Adrian M., and Derksen, Doug A. (2002a) “Economics of crop diversification and soil tillage opportunities in the Canadian prairies.Agronomy Journal 94: 216–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zentner, R. P., Lafond, G. P., Derksen, D. A., and Campbell, C. A. (2002b) “Tillage method and crop diversification: Effect on economic returns and riskiness of cropping systems in a thin black chernozem of the Canadian prairies.Soil and Tillage Research 67 (1): 921.CrossRefGoogle Scholar