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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 633974'Choteau'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS2003DEVELOPED2003CultivarHard red spring wheat with solid stem. Solid stems confer resistance to the wheat stem sawfly. Originally evaluated in a preliminary yield nursery at four Montana locations in 1999, and has been tested yearly at nine or ten Montana locations since 2000. Mean grain yield over 28 location/years 4414 kg/ha, compared to 4450 kg/ha for McNeal and 3732 kg/ha for Fortuna. McNeal is a hollow-stemmed wheat and has been the most widely grown cv. in Montana since 1996. Mean grain volume 775 kg m-3, compared to 768 kg m-3 for McNeal and 773 kg m-3 for Fortuna. Mean heading date was June 23, compared to June 26 for McNeal, and June 24 for Fortuna. Height average 28.5 cm, while McNeal and Fortuna averaged 30.5 cm respectively. Observation of segregation patterns indicate has the Rht2 gene for semidwarf habit, as does McNeal.1648984PI 633974
1PI 613586'Reeder'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS2000DEVELOPED2000CultivarHard red spring wheat.1600196PI 613586
2PI 612605'MTHW9420'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS2000DEVELOPED1999CultivarHard white spring wheat. Mid-early maturity with an average heading date of June 28. Semi-dwarf, with average height of 73 cm. Yield average, 4549 kg/ha. Grain protein percentage 133 g/kg. Straw and chaff white, glumes white, and a lax, awned head. Flag leaf erect. Kernels ovate with a medium length, and have a brush of medium length. Kernels have medium V-shaped crease with angular cheeks. Susceptible to the wheat stem sawfly (Cephis cinctus) and to the Russian wheat aphid (Diuraphis noxia). Resistant to stem rust (Puccinia graminus). Moderately susceptible to leaf rust (Puccinia triticina). Milling and baking quality acceptable. Flour yield averaged 685 g/kg.1594217PI 612605
3PI 607557'Scholar'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1999DEVELOPED1999CultivarHard red spring wheat. Maturity mid-season. Height normal (non-semidwarf). Resistant to stem rust (Puccinia graminus). Susceptible to leaf rust (Puccinia recondita) and Russian wheat aphid (Diuraphis noxia). Resistant to wheat stem sawfly (Cephus ciactus). Lodging moderately resistant.1578305PI 607557
4PI 574642'McNeal'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1993DEVELOPED1994CultivarHard red spring wheat. Semidwarf with the Rht2 genotype, although height is a bit more than most Rht2 genotypes. Maturity mid-season. Awned with brown chaff and straw. Moderately resistant to prevalent races of stem rust (Puccinia graminus). Moderately susceptible to stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis). Yields especially well in eastern Montana.1469613PI 574642
5PI 565333'Vida'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Plovdiv, BulgariaNSGCKERNELS1991DEVELOPEDCultivar1460304PI 565333
6PI 549275'Hi-Line'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1991DEVELOPED1991CultivarHard red spring wheat, semidwarf with white straw and chaff. Spike awned, nodding slightly at maturity. Kernels red, short and ovate with mid-sized brush. Hollow stemmed and susceptible to wheat stem sawfly (Cephus cinctus). Resistant to prevalent races of stem rust (Puccinia graminus). Susceptible to leaf rust (Puccinia recondita) and stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis). Matures at midseason. Produces good test weight, excellant protein and exhibits good milling and baking characteristics1444211PI 549275
7PI 527682'Amidon'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1988DEVELOPED1988CultivarPlants conventional height, medium maturity. Awned. Spikes erect, mid-lax, tapering to fusiform. Shattering resistance satisfactory. Test weight satisfactory. Hard red type, typical for bakery bread flour. Best adaptation western North Dakota and eastern Montana. Res. to prevalent leaf and stem rust races in North Dakota.1422618PI 527682
8PI 500000'Purplestraw'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum United StatesNSGC1985DEVELOPEDCultivarOld American wheat cultivated for more than 125 years in southeastern United States. Important parental line for the development of other cultivars. Plants intermediate habit, midtall, stem purple, midstrong. Maturity early. Spikes fusiform, middense, inclined to nodding, awnletted. Seeds red, short to midlong, ovate or nearly oval, soft. Local names Purplestraw, Alabama Bluestem, Bluestem, Georgia Red, Mountain Purplestraw, Ripley. Winter habit.1394936PI 500000
9CItr 17429'Lew'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1975DEVELOPED1976CultivarHard red spring wheat. Solid stem. Resistant to wheat stem sawfly. Sister selection to Tioga.1079174CItr 17429
10CItr 17430'Newana'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1975DEVELOPED1976CultivarHard red spring wheat. Semi-dwarf.1079177CItr 17430
11CItr 15927'Norana'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1973DEVELOPED1973CultivarHard red spring wheat. Single-gene semidwarf.1073881CItr 15927
12CItr 15233'Shortana'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1971DEVELOPED1971CultivarHard red spring wheat. Semidwarf, white straw and chaff, midseason-to-late in maturity. Shortana is susceptible to leaf rust, moderately resistant to stem and stripe rusts, and resistant to loose smut. It is more productive than Centana and most standard height cultivars in high moisture - high fertility areas.1070681CItr 15233
13CItr 13986'Era'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Minnesota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1970DEVELOPED1970CultivarHard red spring semidwarf wheat. Era is an awned, yellow chaffed, midseason semidwarf wheat with good lodging resistance. It is resistant to the prevalent races of stem rust and appears to have a broader spectrum of resistance than Chris or Polk. It is also resistant to leaf rust, black chaff, and bunt. Ergot does not appear to infect Era. Also appears to be tolerant to Septoria and mildew.1065523CItr 13986
14CItr 13596'Fortuna'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1963DEVELOPED1966CultivarHard red spring wheat. Solid stem. For production in wheat stem sawfly areas.1064093CItr 13596
15CItr 13345'Canthatch'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Manitoba, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1958DEVELOPED1959CultivarHard red spring wheat. Resistant to stem rust races 11 and 15B, otherwise it is similar to Thatcher.1063225CItr 13345
16CItr 13220'Chinook'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Alberta, CanadaNSGCKERNELS1956DEVELOPED1952CultivarHard red spring wheat. Solid stem. Resistance to wheat stem sawfly. Excellent milling and baking qualities.1062794CItr 13220
17CItr 13304'Sawtana'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1956DEVELOPED1961CultivarHard red spring wheat. Recommended for sawfly-infested areas of central, northcentral, and eastern Montana.1063106CItr 13304
18CItr 13100'Selkirk'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Manitoba, CanadaNSGCKERNELS1953DEVELOPED1953CultivarHard red spring wheat. Superior characteristics of Selkirk included stem and leaf rust resistance, high yield, and strong straw. Estimated to have been grown on 10 million acres in 1959 in Canada and the U.S.1062374CItr 13100
19CItr 12974'Centana'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1952DEVELOPED1958CultivarHard red spring wheat. Adapted to the eastern 2/3 of Montana, especially Central Montana, from which it derives its name.1062048CItr 12974
20CItr 12567'Saunders'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Ontario, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1947DEVELOPED1947CultivarHard red spring wheat. Adapted to northern Alberta and northern Saskatchewan.1060737CItr 12567
21CItr 12488'Lee'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Minnesota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1946DEVELOPED1950CultivarHard red spring wheat. Characteristics of Lee included high yield, medium-early maturity, and resistance to some races of leaf and stem rust.1060504CItr 12488
22CItr 12435'Rescue'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Saskatchewan, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1945DEVELOPED1946CultivarHard red spring wheat. Solid stem to resist the wheat stem sawfly, Cephus cinctus.1060374CItr 12435
23CItr 12318'Newthatch'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Minnesota, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1943DEVELOPED1944CultivarHard red spring wheat.1060058CItr 12318
24CItr 12273'Rushmore'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum South Dakota, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1942DEVELOPED1949CultivarHard red spring wheat. Important characteristics of Rushmore included earliness, drought tolerance, and resistance to lodging and shattering.1059912CItr 12273
25CItr 12053'Cadet'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1940DEVELOPED1945CultivarHard red spring wheat. Develooped by the USDA in cooperation with eight states of the hard red spring wheat region.1058871CItr 12053
26CItr 12008'Mida'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1939DEVELOPED1944CultivarHard red spring wheat.1058636CItr 12008
27CItr 11940'Premier'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1938DEVELOPED1938Cultivar1058300CItr 11940
28CItr 11720'Regent'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Manitoba, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1935DEVELOPED1939Cultivar1057351CItr 11720
29CItr 11637'Canus'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Alberta, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1934DEVELOPED1935Cultivar1057023CItr 11637
30CItr 11428'Pilot'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1932DEVELOPED1939CultivarHard red spring wheat. This strain originated as a rust-free lines from a stem rust inheritance study by Clark and Ausemus in 1928.1056089CItr 11428
31CItr 11465'Comet'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Montana, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1932DEVELOPED1940CultivarHard red spring wheat.1056241CItr 11465
32CItr 10003'Thatcher'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Minnesota, United StatesNSGCSpike1929DEVELOPED1934CultivarHard red spring wheat. Solid stem.1051251CItr 10003
33CItr 8026'Supreme'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Saskatchewan, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1925DEVELOPED1922CultivarHard red spring wheat.1042043CItr 8026
34CItr 8182'Reward'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Ontario, CanadaNSGCKERNELS1925DEVELOPED1927CultivarHard red spring wheat.1042622CItr 8182
35CItr 8004'Komar'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1925DEVELOPED1930CultivarHard red spring wheat.1041985CItr 8004
36CItr 6900'Ceres'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum North Dakota, United StatesNSGCImage1923DEVELOPED1926CultivarHard red spring wheat.1038068CItr 6900
37CItr 7370'Reliance'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Oregon, United StatesNSGCSPIKE1923DEVELOPED1926CultivarHard red spring wheat.1039618CItr 7370
38CItr 6477'Defiance'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Sonora, MexicoNSGCKERNELS1919DEVELOPED1878CultivarDefiance is the result of a cross of White Hamburg as the male parent and Golden Drop as the female parent, which was made by Cyrus G. Pringle, in the Champlain Valley, near Charlotte, VT in 1871. It was first distributed in 1878 by B.C. Bliss and Sons as Pringle's Defiance. It showed three distinct types of grain. Prof. A.E. Blount took some of this wheat to the Colorado Agric. Exp. Station, where he grew it during a number of years and made careful selections. Three commercial varieties were developed from it: Early Defiance, Colorado No. 50, and Regenerated Defiance. Prof. A.H. Danielson, who succeeded Prof. Blount at the Colorado station, has recorded the following interesting history of the origin of Defiance wheat: The mother of Defiance traces back to southern England and was originated by F.F. Hallett of Brighton in the 1860's. He is the man who first used the word 'pedigree' as applied to wheat. The mother was a decided club-shaped type with pretty red grain, somewhat soft, and Hallett called it the Golden Drop, which was quite popular in England, but never amounted to much either in this country or Australia. From England it went to Canada where a man named Pringle got it as the Canada Club. The father of Defiance was a Dutchman from Germany. It came from Hamburg from whence lots of wheat emigrated in those days. It had a long coarse broad head, a big white berry, and a rank-growing constitution with good ability to stand on its feet. Good old White Hamburg has long since been dead and buried to cultivation, at least under that name, but was largely grown on the Pacific slope during the early days of cereal culture there.1036725CItr 6477
39CItr 5208'Huston'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Oregon, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1916COLLECTEDplat on Oregon Agric. College station, Corvallis44.56666667, -123.2500000064Cultivar1030614CItr 5208
40CItr 5256'Bluechaff'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Oregon, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1916DEVELOPED1919Cultivar1030778CItr 5256
41CItr 4257'Big Club'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Oregon, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1914COLLECTED44.00000000, -120.00000000Cultivar1027428CItr 4257
42CItr 4067'Pacific Bluestem'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Oregon, United StatesNSGCKERNELSNot Available1914COLLECTED44.00000000, -120.00000000CultivarPacific Bluestem is an old wheat of the Pacific coast area, most commonly known as Bluestem and White Australian. The variety came to the U.S. from Australia. White Lammas was the leading wheat variety of Australia during the earliest years of wheat production in that country. White Australian of California is likely identical to White Lammas of Australia. It apparently was introduced into the U.S. in the early 1850's. Bluestem is the name under which the variety became established in Washington and Oregon after introductions from Australia in 1882 and New Zealand in 1896. It is not known how the name Bluestem became attached since it does not have a purple stem.1026808CItr 4067
43CItr 3641'Marquis'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Ontario, CanadaNSGCKERNELSNot Available1913DEVELOPED1910Cultivar1025379CItr 3641
44CItr 4241'Redchaff'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Washington, United StatesNSGCKERNELS1911COLLECTED47.00000000, -120.00000000Cultivar1027383CItr 4241
45CItr 2958'Preston'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Ontario, CanadaNSGCSPIKE1907DEVELOPED1904Cultivar1022701CItr 2958