What’s the Latest on Spring Wheat Varieties?

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What a difference a year makes! It is not an understatement to say that 2021 was a challenging year for wheat production across Washington state due to the drought, and that was particularly true for spring wheat. Yields and test weights were down across the board with yields running anywhere from 15 to 88% lower than 2020 and test weights down by roughly two pounds per bushel. Our highest yielding dryland site averaged 44 bushel per acre at Palouse, while our lowest yielding site averaged only 6 bushels at Lind. For the second year in a row Reardan stood out with the highest trial average test weight at 61.6 pounds per bushel in the soft white trial and Almira hard red spring averaged the lowest at 54.4 pounds per bushel.
 
The dryland soft white spring trial consisted of 16 named varieties and 8 experimental lines while the hard red spring trial included 12 named and 6 experimental lines in 2021. Of the named varieties, three were spring club wheats and one club was a WSU experimental line ‘WA8325’. When this line is released, it will be named ‘Roger’ and it will be the first spring club wheat with Hessian fly resistance. This is following the previous release of ‘Hedge CL+’, which was the first spring club possessing the 2-gene Clearfield trait.
 
New entries for 2021 include ‘UI Cookie’ and ‘WB6211CLP’ in the soft white spring trial and ‘Lanning’ in the hard red spring trial. UI Cookie came out of the University of Idaho breeding program and were released in 2020. Lanning comes from the Montana State University breeding program and was released in 2016. Overall, UI Cookie yielded about two bushel per acre below the trial average in each dryland precipitation zone with a test weight that fluctuated around the trial average. Under irrigation however, UI Cookie topped the trial. WB6211CLP is meant as a replacement for ‘WB-1035CL+’. It hit the trial averaged in the below 12-inch precipitation zone but ranged between one and three bushels below that in the other zones. It also consistently had one of the lowest test weights in the trial. In the hard red spring trials, Lanning consistently yielded two to three bushel per acre below average with the exception of Almira where it landed in the top yielding group. Test weight was generally one to two pounds per bushel less as well while grain protein was near average for the trial.
 
When looking at soft white spring variety performance for all entries across precipitation zones, ‘AP Coachman’ and ‘Ryan’ both continued to perform well, landing in the top yielding group in every dryland zone. ‘Tekoa’ and ‘Louise’ also handled the tough growing conditions better than most, yielding near the top in three and two zones, respectively, out of four. ‘Seahawk’ numerically was the best across all sites in the over 20 inch zone while ‘AP Mondovi CL2’ did well in relation to others in the below 12 inch zone this year. In the spring planted irrigated sites, UI Cookie, Ryan, ‘WB6341’, and UI Stone all led the pack for yield with ‘WB6121’ achieving the best test weight.
 
In the hard spring wheat trials, I think it is important to mention how impressive some of the new experimental material is looking and performing. ‘WA8315’ and ‘WA8330’ (hard white) are leading the trial in every precipitation zone on multi-year averages. They also stood up well to the extreme conditions in 2021 highlighting their yield stability. There are other newer lines from both the WSU and Croplan programs that also yielded well across all precipitation zones in their first year, sometimes outstripping even the best released varieties, so growers should keep an eye out in the future for when some of these lines will be released, though we are still two to three years out from widespread seed availability. On the named variety side, ‘Net CL+’, ‘Glee’, ‘Chet’, and ‘Alum’ all did well in the over 20-inch precipitation zone whereas Alum stood alone as the best named variety in the 16–20-inch zone. Chet, Net CL+, Alum, ‘Kelse’, and ‘SY Gunsight’ also did well in the below 12-inch zone, however there was little agreement in rankings across locations in the 12-16-inch zone and very little separation across named varieties when looking at the regional average.
 
As mentioned in my previous timely topic, the program added two fall-planted hard red spring trials in 2021 at our irrigated sites in Moses Lake and Pasco. Those trials are in the ground again for the 2022 season along with a dryland site at Dayton, Washington. The best yielding entry ‘AP Venom’ was numerically five bushels higher than the hard red winter wheat check ‘WB4303’ when averaged across the two sites in 2021. Granted, the later planting date (November 2 for Pasco; October 30 for Moses Lake) certainly favored the earlier spring varieties, particular during the early heat last summer. ‘AP Renegade’ and ‘Dayn’ (hard white) were also statistically in the top yielding group.
 
Be sure to check out the full 2021 results on our Small Grains website or through our Variety Selection Tool available either through our website or on our new WSU Variety Selection tool mobile app with both Google Play or Apple downloads. The Washington Grain Commission also publishes a 2021 Preferred Wheat Varieties brochure with end-use quality ratings for commercial varieties.

Acknowledgements

Funding for supplies, travel and technical support for the WSU Extension Cereal Variety Testing Program is provided by the Washington Grain Commission. Facilities, salary, and equipment are provided by WSU administration. We are grateful for the many on-farm cooperators we partner with to conduct these trials around the state. They are essential for producing quality data and their donations of land, time, and resources are appreciated.


Figure 1. Growers talking by the WSU spring wheat variety trials following the Dayton field day in June.


Clark Neely professional headshot.

For questions or comments, contact Clark Neely via email at clark.neely@wsu.edu or mobile phone at (814) 571-5628.