WHEAT

cereal plant of the genus Triticum of the family Gramineae (grass family), a major food and an important commodity on the world grain market.

Wheat Varieties and Their Uses

The wheat plant is an annual, probably derived from a perennial; the ancestry of and precise distinctions between species are no longer always clear. For its early growth wheat thrives best in cool weather. Among the more ancient, and now less frequently cultivated, species are einkorn (T. monococcum), emmer (T. dicoccum), and spelt (T. spelta). Modern wheat varieties are usually classified as winter wheats (fall-planted and unusually winter hardy for grain crops) and spring wheats. Approximately three fourths of the wheat grown in the United States is winter wheat.

Flour from hard wheats (varieties evolved for the most part from T. aestivum) contains a high percentage of gluten and is used to make bread and fine cakes. The hardest-kerneled wheat is durum (T. durum); its flour is used in the manufacture of macaroni, spaghetti, and other pasta products. White- and soft-wheat varieties are paler and have starchy kernels; their flour is preferred for piecrust, biscuits, and breakfast foods. Wheat is used in the manufacture of whiskey and beer, and the grain, the bran (the residue from milling), and the vegetative plant parts make valuable livestock feed. Before the introduction of corn into Europe, wheat was the principal source of starch for sizing paper and cloth.

Diseases and Pests

Wheat is susceptible to many pests and diseases, the more destructive including rust, bunt (see smut), and the Hessian fly and chinch bug. All wheat-producing countries carry on breeding experiments to improve existing varieties or to obtain new ones with such dominant characteristics as disease resistance, increased hardiness under specific environments, and greater yield.

Wheat Production Today

The great wheat-producing countries of the world are the United States, China, and Russia; extensive wheat growing is carried on also in India, W Europe, Canada, Argentina, and Australia. In the United States the wheat belt covers the Ohio Valley, the prairie states, and E Oregon and Washington; Kansas leads the states in production. Large-scale mechanized farming and continued planting of wheat without regard to crop rotation have exhausted the soil of large areas. High-yield wheat, one of the grains resulting from the Green Revolution, requires optimal growth conditions, e.g., adequate irrigation and high concentrations of fertilizer.

History

Wheat was one of the first of the grains domesticated by humans (see grain). Its cultivation began in the Neolithic period. Bread wheat is known to have been grown in the Nile valley by 5000 b.c., and its apparently later cultivation in other regions (e.g., the Indus and Euphrates valleys by 4000 b.c., China by 2500 b.c., and England by 2000 b.c.) indicate that it spread from Mediterranean centers of domestication. The civilizations of W Asia and of the European peoples have been largely based on wheat, while rice has been more important in E Asia. Since agriculture began, wheat has been the chief source of bread for Europe and the Middle East. It was introduced into Mexico by the Spaniards c.1520 and into Virginia by English colonists early in the 17th cent.

Classification

Wheat is classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class Liliopsida, order Cyperales, family Poaceae (Gramineae).

Bibliography

See publications issued by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture; P. T. Dondlinger, The Book of Wheat (1908, repr. 1973); L. T. Evans and W. J. Peacock, ed. Wheat Science: Today and Tomorrow (1981).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...when they would all wake to the fact that wheat, which they had promised to deliver before...mind was upon this one great fact--May Wheat--continually. It was with him the instant...team carried him down town he heard, "Wheat-- wheat--wheat, wheat--wheat...
...period of lost opportunity in Argentina. The World Wheat Market By the mid- 1920s wheat was beginning to swamp the world market. Total...preceding five-year period. Total net exports of wheat rose by exactly the same 12 percent between 1923...
...Growth and Change 21 1990 , 48-60. 11. Wheat, Regional Growth , and "Manufacturing...Haven: Yale University Press, 1962 ; Wheat, Regional Growth; Schmenner, Manufacturing...Prentice-Hall, 1982 ; Leonard F. Wheat, "The Determinants of 1963-77 Regional...
THE FIRST ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF Yankee California ADDRESS AT THE OPENING OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CALIFORNIA CENTENNIAL EXHIBIT November 12, 1949 By CARL I. WHEAT THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Washington
...in terms of pounds of grain per week, wheat for Britain and rice for South India...20 33.00 (c) Barcelona Labour /Wheat 9.09 10.31 5.37 3.17 15.34 64.11 (e) New Castile Labour /Wheat 16.17 (e) Valencia Labour /Wheat...
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...upon the use of the wheat, the hard wheats and the low protein...imports of U.S. wheat, mostly hard spring and winter wheats, fell approximately...very high protein wheat from the United States...medium protein hard wheats from Argentina...
State Trading in Wheat: Perceptions and Reality in Canada-U...existence and operations of the Canadian Wheat Board (CWB) raise a number of questions as to the fairness of Canadian trade in wheat (durum and bread wheat) and barley...
Deletion Polymorphism in Wheat Chromosome Regions with Contrasting...of synteny between hexaploid wheat homeologous chromosomes suggest...of tetraploid and hexaploid wheat digested with DraI were hybridized...search for deletions. Since all wheats are self-pollinating, deletions...
...together to form hexaploid wheat (see Figures 1 and 2...of cultivated diploid wheats. Sequencing hexaploid wheat could yield the greatest...Even though diploid wheats and the subgenomes of hexaploid wheat can be expected to differ...
Targeted Introgression of a Wheat Stem Rust Resistance Gene by DNA Marker...improvement (Ceoloni et al. 2005). Wheat (Triticum aestivum L., 2n = 6x = 42...the Sr genes derived from relatives of wheat (Singh et al. 2006; Jin et al. 2007...
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Wheat Deceit. by Marian Segal , Dori Stehlin...time in the Midwest, a crop of undamaged wheat can bring in thousands of dollars, while...grain company attempted to ship adulterated wheat across state lines, FDA suspected the company...
Exploiting Wheats Weak Sister Status by James...favor bulls in those markets, wheat is a different story as supplies...Norrh and South America, wheat is a global commodity grown...the larger producers spiked wheat prices last year, production...
Wheat, meat under threat. If by the time this article...Iraq only, to minimise the damage being felt. Wheat is the export most seemingly at threat. In the past few years, Australias wheat exports to Iraq have averaged at around two million...
...the technology. "Wheat thats easy to grow...time and money." Wheats unique bread-making...naturally occurring wheat gene, known as 1Ax1, into wheat plants. The gene is...glutenins found in wheats that posess good bread...
Lessons from the Wheat Crisis. by Alex Preston In Frank Norriss...The cause? He begins to speculate on wheat futures at the Chicago Board of Trade...contracts until he controls the price of wheat. Only when his wife demonstrates the damaging...
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Wheat Disease Threatens Supplies; Spread to Iran...lethal variant on an ancient disease affecting wheat has spread from its base in Africa to Iran...agricultural specialists warn. The new strain of wheat-stem rust, first identified in Uganda...
Bakers Worry over Wheat Freight Costs. Byline: BERNIE CAHILES...further compound the already rising cost of wheat in the international market and consequently...association was briefed by Mike Spier, US Wheat Associates assistant regional director...
China, Egypt and Wheat. Byline: The Register-Guard Last summer, Russia banned exports of wheat and other grains to ensure an adequate domestic...from world markets was good news for American wheat farmers, who faced less competition and could...
Wheat Fleet Carries Local-Food Message Downstream...and canoes in Eugene, pick up some donated wheat, beans and barley from local farmers in...was once the scenery that all deliverers of wheat and Willamette Valley-grown food products...
Bread and Butter Film about Wheat Revolution; Old Film of Horsedrawn Crop...How Britain Became Self-Sufficient in Wheat Production in the Years after the Second...the 1960s, the UK imported most of the wheat used to make bread. The story of how...
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encyclopedia articles on: Wheat  - 497 results

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...spelta ). Modern wheat varieties are usually...classified as winter wheats (fall-planted...crops) and spring wheats. Approximately three fourths of the wheat grown in the United States is winter wheat. Flour from hard wheats (varieties evolved...
WHEAT GRASS any plant of the genus Agropyron...family Gramineae ( grass family). Species of wheat grass, both native and introduced, are...range forage grasses in the prairie states. Wheat grasses are also valuable for revegetation...
WHEAT FLY name for several insects harmful to wheat, e.g., the Hessian fly , the wheat gallfly, the wheat midge , and others. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia...
WHEAT RIDGE city (1990 pop. 29,419), Jefferson co., N central Colo., a suburb of Denver; inc. 1969. Chiefly residential, Wheat Ridge is the site of an annual carnation festival...
DURUM WHEAT see wheat . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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