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Triticum polonicum

Triticum polonicum L.  
Family: Poaceae
Polish Wheat
[Triticum abyssinicum Steud., moreTriticum polonicum subsp. abyssinicum (Steud.) Vav., Triticum polonicum var. abissinicum Körn., Triticum turgidum subsp. polonicum (L.) Thell.]
Triticum polonicum image
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Laura A. Morrison. Flora of North America

Culms 100-160 cm; nodes glabrous; internodes mostly hollow, solid for 1 cm below the spikes. Blades to 20 mm wide, glabrous or pubescent. Spikes 7-16 cm, wider than thick or about as wide as thick; rachises enlarged at the base of the glumes, sparsely hairy at the nodes and margins, not disarticulating. Spikelets 25-40 mm, with 4-5 florets, 2-3 seed-forming. Glumes 20-40 mm, often concealing the florets, lanceolate, chartaceous, loosely appressed to the lower florets, with 1 prominent keel, apices acute, terminating in a tooth; lemmas to 30 mm, chartaceous, toothed or awned, awns on the lower 2 lemmas to 15 cm; paleas not splitting at maturity. Endosperm flinty. Haplomes AuB. 2n = 28.

Triticum polonicum is a minor, durum-like, spring wheat species. It is grown in the Mediterranean basin and central Asia on a small scale. In the Flora region, it is grown principally for plant breeding. It differs from other domesticated wheats in its unusually long, chartaceous glumes and lemmas. The epithet -polonicum- reflects an early European botanical bias; the species did not originate in Poland.

Triticum polonicum
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Triticum polonicum image
Triticum polonicum image
Triticum polonicum image
Triticum polonicum image
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This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

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