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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 659083'Sabin'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Minnesota, United StatesPVPONot Available2010DEVELOPED2009CultivarHard red spring wheat. Sabin heads relatively late compared with other adapted cultivars, averaging 58.4 d from planting in Minnesota locations. It is shorter than average at 78.6 cm. Sabin is rated as moderately resistant to preharvest sprouting. It is moderately resistant to leaf rust under field conditions and has a resistant reaction to races TGBG, TCTD, and SBDG and susceptible or mixed reaction to races THBJ, MHDS, MIDJ, TNRJ, MCDS, KFBJ, MFPS, and MBRJ when inoculated on seedlings. Despite its susceptibility to many of the common races, Sabin showed a relatively low leaf rust severity under conditions of high inoculum pressure in 2007 and after inoculation of adult plants with a mixture of races in Crookston and St. Paul, MN. The results of DNA marker testing indicate that Sabin contains the adult plant resistance gene Lr34. It is highly resistant to the prevalent race QFCSC and other important North American stem rust races (QTHJC, RCRSC, RKQQC, TPMKC, and TITfF) at the seedling and adult plant stages. Since the beginning of field evaluations in 2002, natural infection by stem rust on Sabin has not been observed. It has shown moderately susceptible reactions to TTKSK (syn. Ug99) when evaluated in stem rust nurseries in Kenya. Sabin has been evaluated in FHB nurseries since 2003 and has moderate resistance to this disease. It contains the major FHB resistance QTL Fhbl. Sabin has acceptable end-use quality, having average protein content and below average grain volume weight. It contains the 1 and 5+10 subunits of the Glu-A1 and Glu-D1 loci, rspectively that have been positively correlated with bread-making quality.1832056PI 659083