2004
DOI: 10.2135/cropsci2004.3550
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Registration of ‘TAM 111’ Wheat

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Cited by 45 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…Wheat genotypes used for evaluation of responses to WSMV infection included 'Karl 92' (Sears et al, 1997), TAM 111 (Lazar et al, 2004), TAM 112 (PI 643143), CO960293-2, KS96HW10-3 (Seifers et al, 2003), and Mace. KS96HW10-3 and Mace carry the WSMV resistance gene Wsm1.…”
Section: Plant Materialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wheat genotypes used for evaluation of responses to WSMV infection included 'Karl 92' (Sears et al, 1997), TAM 111 (Lazar et al, 2004), TAM 112 (PI 643143), CO960293-2, KS96HW10-3 (Seifers et al, 2003), and Mace. KS96HW10-3 and Mace carry the WSMV resistance gene Wsm1.…”
Section: Plant Materialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hard red winter wheat cultivars TAM 111 and TAM 112 (Lazar et al, 2004;Rudd et al, 2014), are widely cultivated on the SGP and continue to gain popularity among producers. The germplasm resources of these cultivars are used by breeding programs in the US and around the world to improve drought tolerance in arid and semiarid production regions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was extensively tested throughout the Great Plains, including the major wheat‐growing areas in Texas, but is well adapted to the dryland wheat production system of the Texas High Plains and similar areas in the adjacent states. The Texas wheat variety survey in 2012 indicated that ‘TAM 111’ (Lazar et al, 2004) and TAM 112 are currently the two most widely grown cultivars in the state, occupying 36 and 17% of the Texas High Plains acres, respectively, in 2012 (NASS, 2012). TAM 112 is also adapted to Kansas and Colorado, where it was grown on 5.1 and 3% of the wheat acres planted respectively in those two states in 2013 (NASS, 2013a,b).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%