The MDA and University of Minnesota (UMN) co-lead the Statewide Cooperative Partnership.
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) will set approximately 20,000 insect traps this year to survey for spongy moth (Lymantria dispar). The traps will be set throughout the eastern half of the state.
This work is part of the MDA’s annual trapping survey program, designed to protect Minnesota’s forests and urban areas from spongy moth by identifying potential problem areas for future treatments. The goal isn’t to trap every spongy moth. Instead, the survey is key to early detection and slowing the spread of the insect. Annual surveys and follow-up management delay the devastating impacts of spongy moth.
Spongy moth caterpillars eat the leaves of over 300 types of trees and shrubs, favoring oak, poplar, birch, and willow. Severe, repeated infestations can kill trees. Spongy moths are also a human nuisance.
In 2022 and 2023, record numbers of spongy moths were detected in traps placed in Minnesota, reflecting a nationwide trend of increased spread. The infested area of North America includes Minnesota’s Lake and Cook counties, much of Wisconsin, the northeastern region of the U.S., and southeastern Canada.
Nearly 40 MDA survey staff will be setting traps from May through July. Traps will remain in the field until mid-September in the southern region and through October in the northern region. The “delta” traps are small, triangle-shaped, and made of cardboard. Bigger “milk carton” shaped traps will be set in select areas of Carlton, St. Louis, and western Lake counties to survey potentially higher numbers of moths. All the traps contain a pheromone to lure in male spongy moths.
The traps are placed mainly on trees in a grid pattern at a specified distance from each other. The grid allows for the traps to detect as many male moths as possible and provide population data. To be successful, it is important to maintain the survey grid. Citizens are asked not to disturb the traps and to call the MDA’s Report a Pest line at 888-545-MOTH (6684) or email spongy.moth@state.mn.us if they would like traps moved or removed from their property.
In addition, this year the MDA is asking the public to be extra vigilant on spotting potential infestations and reporting potential spongy moth sightings via the Report a Pest online service or by emailing reportapest@state.mn.us.
“With the public’s help, this work protects industries like tourism and forestry from economic harm and saves Minnesota’s urban and forested areas from environmental damage,” said Plant Protection Director Mark Abrahamson.
For more details about the trapping survey program and spongy moth, visit the MDA website.
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Media Contact
Brittany Raveill, MDA Communications
651-201-6131
Brittany.Raveill@state.mn.us
Carrie Allord, a third-grade teacher at St. Francis Catholic School in Brainerd, has been recognized as Minnesota Agriculture in the Classroom’s (MAITC) 2024 Outstanding Teacher Award winner.
Allord uses a wide range of agriculture-themed books, lessons, and materials to support the development of reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills in her students, and is always looking for opportunities to connect plants, animals, and food to the learning activities happening in her classroom. She also uses a classroom chicken named Pearl as well as a chick hatching program to help students investigate lifecycles and connect to important science concepts.
“To be agriculture literate is to understand and respect where our food comes from. It is important for teachers and students to share the knowledge of agriculture so that everyone around us understands how agriculture impacts our world, and our daily lives,” said Allord.
In addition to the state-level award, Allord was also recognized as one of six Excellence in Teaching about Agriculture Award winners by the National Agriculture in the Classroom Organization. She will receive a $500 stipend and travel expenses covered to attend the 2024 National Agriculture in the Classroom Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah, this June.
All Minnesota licensed K-12 educators who creatively integrate agricultural concepts into non-agricultural education classroom settings are eligible for the MAITC Outstanding Teacher Award. Applications are reviewed by a committee of MAITC Foundation board members, who select the recipient each winter.
MAITC is a partnership between the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) and the MAITC Foundation that seeks to increase agricultural literacy through K-12 education. Visit the MAITC website for more information and free educational resources.
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Media Contact:
Logan Schumacher
651-201-6193
Logan.Schumacher@state.mn.us
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) has announced the latest recipients of its Sustainable Agriculture Demonstration Grant, awarding nearly $350,000 to 12 projects across the state focused on researching sustainable ag practices and systems.
The Agricultural Growth, Research, and Innovation (AGRI) Sustainable Agriculture Demonstration Grant funds innovative research or demonstration projects that explore the energy efficiency, environmental benefit, and profitability of sustainable agriculture techniques — from the production through marketing processes — on Minnesota farms.
Topics being researched by this year’s grantees range from cover cropping, solar land access, in-row weeding systems, biocontrol techniques, and cut flower production. An overview of each awarded project is provided in the table below.
Grant project updates are published annually in the MDA’s Greenbook, which provides a summary of each active project along with results, management tips, locations of previous projects, and other resources to help encourage widespread adoption of sustainable practices.
The next round of Sustainable Agriculture Demonstration Grants will open for applications in the fall of 2024. Visit the grant webpage for updates and more information on previous projects.
Funding for this program is made available through the MDA’s AGRI Program, which administers grants to farmers, agribusinesses, schools, and more throughout the state of Minnesota. The AGRI Program exists to advance Minnesota’s agricultural and renewable energy sectors.
Grantee Name |
Project Title |
Grant Amount |
Grantee City |
Project Location (County/Reservation) |
Amundsen Farms, Inc |
Atmospheric Water Collection Project |
$48,955 |
Duluth |
Carlton and St. Louis |
Anishinaabe Agriculture Institute |
Hemp Wool Matting Pilot Project |
$11,101 |
Osage |
White Earth Reservation; Becker, Wadena, and Aitkin County |
Anthony Polyakov |
Optimizing Crop Productivity and Quality Through Targeted Electric and Magnetic Field Exposure |
$24,997.89 |
Eden Prairie |
Scott |
Bemidji State University |
Computer Vision Guided In-row Weeding System for Organic Farming in Northern Minnesota |
$25,000 |
Bemidji |
Beltrami |
Fond du Lac Reservation Business Committee |
Fond du Lac Gitigaaning Regenerative vs. Conventional |
$25,000 |
Cloquet |
Carlton and St. Louis |
Lakeside Prairie Farm LLC |
Restoration of an Oak Savannah Following Buckthorn Removal by Goats |
$25,000 |
Barrett |
Grant |
Owl Forest Farm |
Evaluating Cold-Hardy Roses for Cut Flower Production in USDA Zone 3 |
$49,830 |
Iron |
St. Louis |
Regents of the University of Minnesota |
Broccolini: A Broccoli Alternative to Limit Losses Due to Pathogens and Pests |
$32,836 |
Minneapolis |
Carver, Meeker, Ramsey, and Rice |
Regents of the University of Minnesota |
Bounty and Blooms: Integration of Cut Flowers in Urban Vegetable Farms |
$48,500 |
Minneapolis |
Ramsey and Hennepin |
The Food Group |
Enabling Solar Facility Land Access for Emerging and Immigrant Farmer Empowerment |
$19,818.48 |
New Hope |
Sherburne |
Twin Cities Berry Company |
Investigating Biocontrol Techniques to Reduce Spray Usage Inside Affordable, Controlled Environments |
$24,577.02 |
St. Paul |
Isanti |
Urban Roots MN |
Cover Cropping to Remediate Urban Soil Compaction |
$11,534.15 |
St. Paul |
Ramsey |
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Media Contact
Logan Schumacher
651-201-6193
Logan.Schumacher@state.mn.us
2022 baseline data
In 2022, the Partnership designed and conducted three surveys to collect baseline data from M
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture’s (MDA) Rural Finance Authority (RFA) has announced details for the next round of funding for its popular Down Payment Assistance Grant program, which will open for applications on August 1, 2024.
The Down Payment Assistance Grant offers up to $15,000 for qualified farmers to purchase their first farm. Eligible applicants must earn less than $250,000 per year in gross agricultural sales, and each award must be matched with at least $8,000 of other funds.
While all eligible farmers are encouraged to apply, priority for this round of grants will be given to applicants with no more than $100,000 in annual gross farm product sales or applicants who are producers of industrial hemp, cannabis, or specialty crops. Applicants cannot be related by blood or marriage to the owner of the farmland that they intend to acquire.
After the application window closes, all eligible requests will be placed in a randomized lottery to determine the order in which grants are awarded, with the identified priority applicants being given precedence. If funding remains after the MDA has awarded grants to all priority applicants, the MDA will award as many grants as funding allows to all remaining applicants in the order of their lottery placement.
Applications will be accepted until 11:59 p.m. on September 15, 2024, and applicants will be notified of award decisions in late September.
Awards will remain valid for purchases closing within six months after award approval or until June 30, 2025, whichever is sooner. Farm purchases must take place after approval of the application. The MDA cannot award grants retroactively for purchases that have already happened.
To view the full grant eligibility requirements and access the RFP, visit the MDA website.
Leading up to the opening of the application window, the MDA and Farmland Access Hub are partnering to host a series of informational webinars for prospective applicants. Each webinar will focus on a different topic related to the grant program and the farm-buying process. Details on each session and how to join are below.
- Grant Overview and Preparation for Buying a Farm
- Tuesday, July 23, 4-5 p.m.
- Join through Zoom.
- Affordability and Financing Your Farm Purchase
- Wednesday, July 24, 4-5 p.m.
- Join through Zoom.
- Finding and Securing Farmland
- Tuesday, July 30, 4-5 p.m.
- Join through Zoom.
- Detailed Review of Grant RFP
- Wednesday, July 31, 4-5 p.m.
- Join through Zoom.
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Media Contact
Logan Schumacher
651-201-6193
Logan.Schumacher@state.mn.us