Morning Ag Clips logo
  • Subscribe ❯
  • PORTAL ❯
  • LOGIN ❯
  • By Keyword
  • By topic
  • By state
  • Home
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Store
  • Advertise
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Subscribe to our
    daily email
    ❯
  • Portal Registration❯
  • Login❯
  • policy
  • tractors & machinery
  • education
  • conservation
  • webinars
  • business
  • dairy
  • cattle
  • poultry
  • swine
  • corn
  • soybeans
  • organic
  • specialty crops
  • Alabama
  • Alaska
  • Arizona
  • Arkansas
  • California
  • Colorado
  • Connecticut
  • Delaware
  • Florida
  • Georgia
  • Hawaii
  • Idaho
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Iowa
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Maine
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • Mississippi
  • Missouri
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • North Dakota
  • Ohio
  • Oklahoma
  • Oregon
  • Pennsylvania
  • Rhode Island
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • Virginia
  • Washington
  • West Virginia
  • Wisconsin
  • Wyoming

Morning Ag Clips

  • By Keyword
  • By topic
  • By state
  • policy
  • tractors & machinery
  • education
  • conservation
  • webinars
  • business
  • dairy
  • cattle
  • poultry
  • swine
  • corn
  • soybeans
  • organic
  • specialty crops
  • Home
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Store
  • Advertise
Home Ā» K-State chosen as hub for improving winter wheat
wheat
WHEAT HUB ...

K-State chosen as hub for improving winter wheat

University will lead $1M project to improve winter wheat varieties

PUBLISHED ON June 25, 2020

wheat grain (Sleepy Claus, Flickr/Creative Commons)
wheat grain (Sleepy Claus, Flickr/Creative Commons)
The USDA's National Institute for Food and Agriculture has selected Kansas State University to serve as a center for efforts to improve U.S. winter wheat varieties. (Sleepy Claus, Flickr/Creative Commons)

MANHATTAN, Kan. — The USDA’s National Institute for Food and Agriculture has selected Kansas State University to serve as a center for efforts to improve U.S. winter wheat varieties.

The university received $1 million to establish the International Wheat Yield Partnership’s (IWYP) Winter Wheat Breeding Innovation Hub. K-State will lead the effort to evaluate research findings from several IWYP projects that contribute to “significantly improved” wheat yields, according to officials.

Hub partners will seek ways to stack – or combine — desirable traits from those projects into elite winter wheat varieties for U.S. growers. Desirable traits may include genetic improvements that make winter wheat more resistant to pests, disease or drought, thus improving its yield potential.

Eduard Akhunov, a K-State wheat geneticist and the project’s principal investigator, said that stacking desirable traits (called trait packages) in wheat varieties helps researchers “deliver key yield traits to U.S. growers as quickly as possible to reverse the declining trend of winter wheat acreage, and add significant economic value to the U.S. and global wheat industries.”

Akhunov said the hub is a public-private partnership between national and international wheat breeding programs, government organizations and industry.

“This partnership is established to maximize the value of research investments for the benefit of global agriculture by translating research findings into commercial breeding products,” he said.

It is estimated that the world’s wheat production must double by the year 2050 in order to meet the needs of a population expected to surpass 9 billion people. Akhunov said researchers around the world already are working on that challenge, having discovered many valuable agronomic traits that pave the way for future wheat improvements.

“To fully implement these advances in breeding programs, we must put together a systematic effort to transfer traits to elite lines that are relevant to regional breeding programs,” he said. “Grain yields are critical for global food security. State wheat growers and commodity groups consider increasing grain yield at the farm level as one of the main priorities for the industry.”

Akhunov said members of the new hub will test findings from IWYP projects to build trait packages for higher-yielding winter wheat, which refers to varieties that are planted in the fall and harvested in late spring or early summer. Another IWYP Hub at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) in Mexico leads a project to translate research and validate improvements for spring wheat, or those varieties planted in the spring and harvested in the fall.

Akhunov believes K-State is the right place to work on winter wheat, noting the university has one of the most productive winter wheat breeding programs in the United States. Since the early 1990s, K-State has released more than 40 winter wheat varieties.

The university has greenhouse space, growth chamber facilities, and research fields for screening preliminary and advanced lines, he said.

“The combined expertise, capabilities, infrastructure and germplasm to conduct this type of work already exists here,” Akhunov said, noting the university’s close work with the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service and the Kansas Wheat Innovation Center, both located in Manhattan.

“This is an important time for wheat, and the timing of this project coincides perfectly with the investment Kansas farmers are making into wheat at the Kansas Wheat Innovation Center and K-State,” said Justin Gilpin, the chief executive officer with Kansas Wheat.

K-State’s Wheat Genetics Resources Center and Integrated Genomics Facility, and the ARS’s Hard Red Winter Wheat Quality Lab and Hard Winter Wheat Genotyping Lab, are among the partners that make this work possible in Manhattan, according to Akhunov.

“These partnerships allow for rapid, genomics-assisted trait transfer and stacking in elite germplasm using high-throughput diagnostic and genome-wide markers, speed breeding and field-based trait evaluation,” he said.

The new IWYP Hub includes many other public and private partners including the Kansas Wheat Commission, Kansas Department of Agriculture, Kansas Wheat Alliance, Heartland Plant Innovations, Colorado Wheat Administrative Committee, Nebraska Wheat Board, Oklahoma Wheat Commission, Texas Wheat Producers Board, National Association of Wheat Growers, BASF, Syngenta, Corteva Agriscience, KWS, Limagrain and representatives of the U.S. winter wheat public-breeding programs.

Some of the public and private partners are also providing contributions beyond the $1 million K-State has received from NIFA.

In addition to Akhunov, the co-principal investigators for the project include K-State faculty members Allan Fritz; Jessica Rupp; Romulo Lollato and Jesse Poland; ARS research geneticist Mary Guttieri; and IWYP program director Jeff Gwyn, who is at Texas A&M AgriLife.

“Collaborations of public and private expertise and resources are what it will take to get wheat genetics to the next level,” Gilpin said. “Having the hub of this initiative centrally located in Manhattan with the involvement of wheat growers, university and USDA scientists, and wheat breeders is exciting to see for the wheat industry.”

More information about the International Wheat Yield Partnership is available online.

— Pat Melgares, Kansas Wheat

For more news from Kansas, click here.

RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

K-State researchers uncover new clues for improving wheat
March 08, 2022

MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas State University researchers continue to unlock the complexity of the wheat genome, recently publishing findings of a study that characterized numerous genes duplicated thousands of years ago to understand how they control wheat yield and other desirable traits. Wheat geneticist Eduard Akhunov, the director of K-State’s Wheat Genetic Resources Center, said […]

Texas to lead drone data processing as part of $15 million national wheat project
February 14, 2022

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Texas A&M AgriLife will lead the creation of an unmanned aircraft system, UAS, data hub as a component of a $15 million grant that brings together the strengths of the public wheat breeding programs in 19 universities across the U.S. This is the fourthĀ U.S. Department of AgricultureĀ National Institute of Food and […]

Texas to lead drone data processing as part of $15M national wheat project
February 08, 2022

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Texas A&M AgriLife will lead the creation of an unmanned aircraft system, UAS, data hub as a component of a $15 million grant that brings together the strengths of the public wheat breeding programs in 19 universities across the U.S. This is the fourthĀ U.S. Department of AgricultureĀ National Institute of Food and […]

Producers continue to pick OSU wheat varieties
April 12, 2021

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma State University (OSU) varieties continue to lead planted acres of Hard Red Winter Wheat across the state of Oklahoma, according to the April 2021 ā€œOklahoma Variety Reportā€ from USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. For the fourth year in a row, the top four leading wheat varieties planted in the state were […]

Leaders break ground on NYS Regional Food Hub
March 29, 2021

BRONX, N.Y. — Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul, Empire State Development Acting President and CEO Eric Gertler, New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets Commissioner Richard A. Ball, New York City Economic Development Corporation Acting President Rachel Loeb, Congressman Ritchie Torres, Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr., Council Member Salamanca and community […]

Spread the word

Browse More Clips

Day 8, Kansas wheat harvest report

United States hog inventory up 5 percent

Primary Sidebar

MORE

KANSAS CLIPS

The Cattle Price Discovery and Transparency Act
February 2, 2023
cattle on feed
CattleFax forecasts producer profitability in 2023
February 2, 2023
KDA announces 2023 Bluestem Pasture Survey
February 2, 2023
Bureau of Land Management and USDA Forest Service announce 2023 grazing fees
February 2, 2023
2022 Heritage Breed Microgrants awarded
February 2, 2023
  • Trending
  • Latest

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE...

Great Lakes Crop Summit
Great Lakes Crop Summit sees record numbers
February 2, 2023
Michigan Wheat Program Winter Grower Meeting
January 31, 2023
larger crop seeds
UK study could help fight food insecurity
January 26, 2023
Commodity Classic announces Main Stage line-up for 2023
January 26, 2023
MI AG CORE
MI Ag CORE graduates first leadership class
January 26, 2023

Footer

MORNING AG CLIPS

  • Contact Us
  • Sponsors
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Privacy Statement
  • Terms of Service

CONNECT WITH US

  • Like Us on Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

TRACK YOUR TRADE

  • Markets & Economy
  • Cattle Updates
  • Dairy News
  • Policy & Politics
  • Corn Alerts

QUICK LINKS

  • Account
  • Portal Membership
  • Just Me, Kate
  • Farmhouse Communication

Get the MAC App Today!

Get it on Google Play
Download on the App Store

© 2023 Morning Ag Clips, LLC. All Rights Reserved.