Research
Our History
Quality testing of Western U.S. wheat breeding lines and investigations dates back to a 1936 report of regional nurseries conducted by the Bureau of Plant Industry located in Washington, D.C. Officially established in 1946, the Western Wheat Quality Laboratory (WWQL) has been located in the region it serves for over 75 years. In a 1949 report, Dr. Mark Barmore describes the laboratory’s overarching objective to address challenges that remain relevant today:
The general objectives of the laboratory are variety characterization and research on quality in wheat. The first is needed to supply plant breeders with information on which to make accurate, intelligent decisions regarding the suitability of breeding materials, as well as on new varieties for milling and baking purposes. Research is essential to determine the fundamental factors responsible for the desirable and undesirable characteristics of wheat and flour from the utilization standpoint. Research is also necessary on milling and baking methods, ingredients, and the physical and chemical properties of wheat and flour in order to devise new and improved methods of characterization.
Dr. Mark Baremore (1949)
Cereal chemists work with wheat breeders by evaluating the quality of breeding lines. Specific methodologies and tests for wheat quality evaluations exist, have evolved and have been amended for well over 100 years. The Cereals and Grains Association (formerly known as AACC International), through its Approved Methods and Technical Committees, has published numerous methods for quality evaluation. Most of the quality evaluation methodologies employed at the WWQL are standard or slightly modified versions of the methods from the Cereals and Grains Association. The WWQL has played a leadership role in this area, developing new methods and reporting on the utility of existing methods. A selection of these methods includes:
- Adaptation of AACC Method 56-11, Solvent Retention Capacity, for use as an early generation selection tool for cultivar development
- An improved whole-seed assay for screening wheat germplasm for polyphenol oxidase activity
- Optimizing the SDS sedimentation test for end-use quality selection in a soft white and club wheat breeding program
- Evaluation of commercial α-amylase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test kits for wheat
- A critical examination of the sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sedimentation test for wheat meals