Abstract

The Department of Wheat Genetic Resources of the All-Russian Research Institute of Plant Genetic Resources (VIR) had developed and published in 1979 a classification of the genus Triticum L., which is based on the genomic composition of species and the presence or absence of a number of main genes that govern the “classification” traits. The grounds have been laid by F. Körnicke and J. Percival, and supplemented by N.I. Vavilov and K.A. Flaksberger. The classification, which is most often referred to as the “Classification of Triticum by Dorofeev et al.”, belongs to a number of the main modern classifications of the genus. This is the world’s first standardized system that contains all known intraspecific (infraspecific) taxa of wild and cultivated wheat species. A detailed classification makes it possible to identify a wide variety of forms in the genus Triticum L. and its individual species, which is especially important for collections preserved in genetic seed banks. The use of the intraspecific classification of the genus Triticum L. greatly simplifies the identification of the VIR collection accessions introduced from various sources or checking accession identity after regeneration in the field. However, the direct use of such a voluminous classification meets several difficulties. Therefore, we propose a unified intraspecific classification of durum wheat, based on the description of only 16 main botanical varieties out of 131 described so far, which have complexes of morphological traits of the spike and kernel that occur most frequently in durum wheat collections. The remaining 115 botanical varieties, which have additional traits, get their name by the addition of the abbreviated Latin name of one or another additional trait to the main name. Having mastered this way of describing the morphological traits of accessions, any user can easily navigate oneself in the systematized intraspecific diversity of collections. The purpose of this work is to acquaint the reader with the intraspecific classification of durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) developed at VIR and to offer its simplified version, which is based on the identification of the main and additional morphological traits of the spike and kernel.

Highlights

  • Durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) is characterized by a wide diversity of varieties and forms

  • The objective of this work is to acquaint the reader with the intraspecific classification of durum wheat (Triticum du­ rum Desf.) developed at VIR, and to offer its simplified analog based on the identification and illustration of the main and additional morphological characters of the ear and kernel

  • Materials and methods Here, we propose a unified intraspecific classification of the durum wheat species, based on the description of only 16 main botanical varieties which have the most commonly occurring sets of morphological characters of the ear and kernel, and

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Summary

Introduction

Durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) is characterized by a wide diversity of varieties and forms. The term “taxonomy” was in­ troduced by the Swiss botanist Augustin Pyrame de Candolle, the creator of the natural system of plants classification – the de Candolle system – and designated the theory of plant clas­ sification, according to the rules of which taxa are arranged in the system (de Candolle, 1813). In his treatise “On the Origin of Species...”, the English naturalist Charles Robert Darwin considered the terms taxonomy and systematic as synonyms (Darwin, 1859). Systematics studies the diversity of organisms, and the causes and ways of its appearance, and includes taxonomy and nomenclature

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