| Breeding Home Page | Durum Wheat Improvement | |||
|
Durum
Wheat Durum Wheat Production Durum Wheat Project Leader Education Professional Experience Current Research Teaching Responsibilities Publications Durum Wheat Project Staff Graduate Students Objectives Breeding Methods Modified Pedigree Method Doubled Haploid Marker-assisted Breeding Breeding for Agronomic Traits Grain yield Plant height Maturity Breeding for Disease Resistance Fusarium head blight Tan spot Rusts Breeding for Quality Traits Color Grain protein Complete quality traits Durum Wheat Varieties Divide 2005 Grenora 2005 Alkabo 2005 Dilse 2002 Pierce 2001 Lebsock 1999 Plaza 1999 Maier 1998 Mountrail 1998 Belzer 1997 Ben 1996 Munich 1995 All NDSU durum releases Durum Wheat Products Pasta Products Couscous Bulgur Frekeh or Firik Breakfast cereal Durum Wheat Bread Desserts
|
![]() Yield trial plots Durum Wheat Among all cultivated wheats, Triticum aestivum and Triticum durum are the most important cereal crops in the world. Durum wheat is a minor crop, grown on only 8 to 10% of all the wheat cultivated area. The remaining area is cultivated with hexaploid bread wheat. Durum wheat is better adapted to semiarid climates than is bread wheat. The world's durum wheat acreage and production is concentrated in the Middle East, North Africa, the former USSR, the North American Great Plains, India, and Mediterranean Europe. Durum is a spring wheat, although winter durum is grown. In spite of its low acreage, durum wheat is an economically important crop because of its unique characteristics and end products. It is generally considered the hardiest of all wheats. Durum kernels are usually large, golden amber, and translucent. These characteristics, along with its protein content and gluten strength, make it suitable for manufacturing diverse food products. Pasta is the most common durum end product consumed in Europe, North America, and the former USSR. Products other than pasta are also made from durum wheat. Couscous, made from durum semolina, is consumed mainly in North Africa. Flat bread made from durum wheat and bulgur are part of the main diet in Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. The quality of durum wheat is highly correlated with the quality of its end products. Durum wheat, with its high kernel weight, test weight, protein content, and gluten strength, is known to be associated with the firmness and resiliency of the cooked pasta products and the stability of cooking.
Durum wheat kernels |
|||