RATIN

OSU to launch new Orange Blossom wheat variety

Posted on May, 5, 2025 at 10:52 pm


Oklahoma wheat fields are overdue for another groundbreaking wheat comparable to the Doublestop CL Plus variety with strong disease resistance and good protein content.

Oklahoma State University Agriculture will launch a new Clearfield wheat variety this summer with all the strong qualities the wheat industry needs, such as high yield potential, strong tolerance to leaf rust, stripe rust and spring freezes, and good milling quality.

High yield potential means a more profitable crop for producers. The greatest virtue of the Orange Blossom variety is its ability to fight off stripe rust infection in multiple environments, beginning with stem extension. This protects the high yield potential that comes from Clearfield genetics. Stripe rust, which has become a problem in Oklahoma, can cause low yields for farmers, reducing the amount of wheat available in the food industry for bread and other grain products.

OSU has not released a Clearfield variety in several years, with Doublestop CL Plus released in 2013 and Strad CL Plus in 2017. Clearfield Plus varieties have strong resistance to the annual grass control herbicide called Beyond due to two gene mutations within the Clearfield genetic line.

“The time was ripe for an upgrade. Given the popularity of Doublestop CL Plus with Oklahoma and south-central Kansas wheat producers, it made sense that upgrade would come from Doublestop CL Plus genetics,” said Brett Carver, wheat genetics chair and regents professor in the OSU Department of Plant and Soil Sciences. “I wanted the new variety name to connect to its direct parent, Doublestop CL Plus, in a musical way and to OSU (with orange as the school color) as the variety developer. The name Orange Blossom CL+ was one way to cover both.”

Orange Blossom Special is a famous fast-paced musical piece created by Ervin T. Rouse in the 1930s that is primarily played with a fiddle. The song also uses double stops, a musical technique of simultaneously playing two notes simultaneously on a stringed instrument.

After six years of field trials across the state, OSU Wheat Improvement Team members are confident that this variety, with about 66% Doublestop CL Plus lineage, is well adapted to Oklahoma’s various climate conditions and pest pressures.

The variety proved to have strong yield potential in the absence of a fungicide – Orange Blossom CL+ exceeded Doublestop CL Plus in yield by nearly 15%, while its test weight was equal to or slightly better than Doublestop.

“This is an extremely rare trait combination inside or outside the Clearfield genetic pipeline,” Carver said. “Surpassing the yield of Doublestop CL Plus alone is not so extraordinary, but to couple this yield advantage with a comparable or slightly higher test weight would be difficult to repeat.”

Source: The Journal Record