Wheat
Triticum aestivum
About Wheat
Wheat is the most widely grown crop by harvested area and the second most produced cereal after maize. It provides approximately 20% of global food calories and protein. Bread wheat (T. aestivum) is the dominant species, with durum wheat (T. durum) used for pasta. Wheat is a cool-season crop critical to food security in South Asia (India, Pakistan), North Africa, the Middle East, and increasingly in East Africa. India is the world's second-largest wheat producer. The Green Revolution wheat varieties developed by Norman Borlaug saved an estimated billion lives. Modern challenges include emerging threats from wheat blast and new rust races adapting to warmer conditions.
Growing Conditions
Full sun — long day plant, requires 12+ hours of daylight for optimal development in many varieties
350-650 mm per crop. Most critical water demand is at booting through grain fill. Drought or heat stress at flowering causes severe yield loss.
Well-drained loam to clay loam. pH 6.0-7.5. Wheat tolerates slightly alkaline soils better than most cereals.
Optimal 15-24°C for growth, 12-18°C for grain fill. Vernalization (cold period) required for winter wheat types.
Low to moderate preferred. High humidity promotes rust, Fusarium head blight, and Septoria.
Cool season — winter wheat sown in autumn, spring wheat sown in spring. 100-150 days to maturity.
Step-by-Step Growing Tips
Select variety suited to your latitude and sowing date (winter vs spring type)
Sow at recommended date — early sowing for winter wheat, timely for spring wheat
Apply nitrogen in splits: at sowing, tillering, and flag leaf
Scout for rust regularly from tillering through grain fill
Harvest promptly when grain moisture reaches 12-14% to avoid weather damage
Rotate with broadleaf crops (legumes, oilseeds) to break cereal disease cycles
Disease Risks to Watch
All diseases →Wheat stem rust (Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici) causes reddish-brown pustules on stems, leaf sheaths, and leaves. The Ug99 race is a major global threat. Manage with resistant varieties carrying Sr31+Sr38 or Sr25 genes, early planting, and preventive fungicide sprays of tebuconazole or propiconazole at first sign of pustules.
Wheat stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis) produces bright yellow-orange pustule stripes along leaf veins. It prefers cool weather (10-18°C) but new warm-adapted races are expanding its range. Apply propiconazole or tebuconazole at flag leaf emergence, plant resistant varieties, and avoid late sowing in cool, wet regions.
Wheat blast (Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Triticum) causes sudden head bleaching, destroying 40-100% of grain. Emerged in Brazil (1985), reached Bangladesh (2016), and threatens South Asia. Few resistant varieties exist. Manage with 2NS translocation varieties, mancozeb + tricyclazole at heading, crop rotation, and avoiding late sowing during warm wet weather.
Companion Planting
✅ Good Companions
Growing Zones
Frequently Asked Questions
When is the best time to plant Wheat?
Cool season — winter wheat sown in autumn, spring wheat sown in spring. 100-150 days to maturity.
What soil does Wheat need?
Well-drained loam to clay loam. pH 6.0-7.5. Wheat tolerates slightly alkaline soils better than most cereals.
How much water does Wheat need?
350-650 mm per crop. Most critical water demand is at booting through grain fill. Drought or heat stress at flowering causes severe yield loss.
What are the most common diseases affecting Wheat?
The most common diseases are: wheat stem rust, wheat stripe rust, wheat blast. Monitor regularly and practice crop rotation.
What plants grow well with Wheat?
Good companions include: clover, vetch. Avoid planting near no specific plants.
Related Crops — Poaceae
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