CLASSIFICATION OF AMERICAN WHEAT VARIETIES. 189 



KUBANKA. 



Description. — Plant spring habit, midseason, tall; stem white, niidstrong; 

 spike awned, broadly oblong, dense, inclined to nodding; glumes glabrous, 

 yellowish, midlong, wide ; shoulders midwide, usually rounded ; beaks wide, 

 1 mm. long; awns yellowish, 6 to 15 cm. long; kernels white (amber), large, 

 hard, elliptical; germ midsized; crease midwide, shallow; cheeks angular; 

 brush midsized, short. 



Kubanka is a high-yielding variety and is more resistant to stem rust than 

 Arnautka. It differs from Arnautka in having shorter, denser, and more 

 erect spikes, and shorter beaks and kernels. It also is a better milling variety 

 than Arnautka. A spike, glumes, and kernels of Kubanka wheat are shown 

 in Plate LVII, B, and a single spike in Plate IV, Figure 6. 



History.— The Kubanka variety is of Russian origin. More than a dozen 

 importations into the United States have been made. The principal introduc- 

 tion of the variety was made in 1900 by M. A. Carleton, of the United States 

 Department of Agriculture, from Uralsk Territory, Russia (197, S. P. I. No. 

 5639). The original seed of this introduction was grown under contract in 

 New Mexico and South Dakota in 1901, and the following year 200 bushels 

 of seed were distributed to many growers. The distribution was continued 

 by the Department up to 1909. Aside from the distribution made by the 

 United States Department of Agriculture, both the North Dakota and South 

 Dakota experiment stations distributed large quantities to growers. The 

 Kubanka hrst proved specially well adapted to the drier western portions of 

 the Great Plains area. In recent years it has proved well adapted to the 

 more humid sections also and is now considered the best adapted of the durum 

 varieties to all of the varying conditions in the northern spring-wheat section 

 of the United States. 



Distribution. — Grown in Colorado, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South 

 Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Durum wheat was reported from a dozen 

 other States in 1919, but it can not be determined just what proportion of 

 the distribution shown is of the Kubanka variety. 



Sin, oiii/ ms. — Beloturka, Gharnovka, Pererodka, Taganrog, and Yellow Ghar- 

 novka. 



Beloturka (meaning white Turk) is of Russian origin and, like Kubanka, 



;ilso been introduced into the United States many times. The wheat 



received under this name has proved to be similar to Kubanka. In both 



Russia and Algeria, where Beloturka wheat is widely grown, the name is used 



synonymous with Kubanka. 



Tin- Gharnovka variety was obtained in two lots (197, S. P. I. Nos. 5643 and 

 5646) from Taganrog, Territory of Hi" Don Cossacks, Russia, by M. A. Carleton, 

 for the United States Department of Agriculture in 1900. These both proved 

 t<, In- eery similar to Kulmnka, and they were grown in experiments in the 

 northern Great Plains for a Dumber or years, hut have now been discontinued 

 :n most point:-- because they did not prove to be superior to Kubanka in yield. 



Pererodka was first obtained by M. A. Carleton, for the United States De- 

 partment of Agriculture in 1899 from the Orsh district, Orenburg Government, 

 l an. s. P. I. No. 2954). Concerning the name or this wheal Carleton 

 t :,■> p L8) ban written as follows: 



mtv closely allied to Kubanka. The word Pererodka means 



egenerated or degenerated, in the case of iis application to ihis 



eat, ii is apparently understood to have the latter meaning. As 



fl, when Kubanka ivheat, bj transference to darker soil, becomes 



i in,. i darker grained, ii is called Pererodka. 



