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| ACCESSION | PLANT NAME | TAXONOMY | ORIGIN | GENEBANK | IMAGE | AVAILABILITY | RECEIVED | SOURCE TYPE | SOURCE DATE | COLLECTION SITE | COORDINATES | ELEVATION | HABITAT | IMPROVEMENT LEVEL | NARRATIVE | | |
|---|
| 0 | PI 667743 | 'Antero' | Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum | Colorado, United States | PVPO | | Not Available | 2013 | DEVELOPED | 2012 | | | | | Cultivar | Antero is an awned, white-chaffed, hard white winter wheat. Antero is medium maturing and medium height. Antero has a medium-short coleoptile, medium straw strength, and moderate pre-harvest sprouting tolerance. Antero was selected as an F3-derived F4 line (F3:4). Antero is moderately resistant to North American races of stem rust (caused by Puccinia graminis Pers.:Pers f. sp. tritici Eriks. and E. Henn) and susceptible to those found in Kenya (Ug-99 and derivatives). Antero is moderately resistant to stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis Westend.), susceptible to leaf rust (caused by Puccinia triticina Eriks.), moderately resistant to wheat soilborne mosaic and wheat spindle streak mosaic viruses, and moderately susceptible to barley yellow dwarf virus. The reaction of Antero to wheat streak mosaic virus is not known. Antero is heterogeneious for resistance to a collection of endemic biotypes of the Hessian fly [Mayetiola destructor (Say)], susceptible to greenbug Biotype E [Schizaphis graminum (Rondani)], and susceptible to Russian wheat aphid (Diuraphis noxia Kurdjumov) Biotypes 1 and 2. | 1909671 | PI 667743 |