[SARE 01 Feb 2013] – North Carolina organic wheat producers who face challenges in controlling stubborn weeds, specifically Italian ryegrass, may soon be able to choose from varieties that suppress those weed populations. North Carolina State University graduate student Margaret Worthington is studying 60 soft red winter wheat cultivars from public and private breeding programs for morphological characteristics and allelopathic traits that would help the wheat plants out-compete Italian ryegrass. “The goal of the project is identify wheat varieties that can out-perform Italian ryegrass in the field while not compromising yields, so that organic and conventional wheat growers have options available to them to control weeds that don’t involve chemical applications,” said Worthington. “Through this work, we can develop improved breeding protocols that will enable public sector wheat breeders across the Southeast to select for lines with enhanced allelopathy and morphological traits conferring weed suppressive ability.