Measuring varietal purityWhy do we measure varietal purity?For seed to be classified as “good or certified,” it must be able to pass a seed certification standard that determines whether the seed is true to varietal type. How do we measure varietal purity?The measurements needed to determine varietal purity are grain size and shape, 1000-grain weight, and number of red grains in the sample. Grain size and shapeGrain size and shape (length-width ratio) is a very stable varietal property that can be used to measure the varietal purity of a sample. Comparing the length-width ratio of the sample with a published ratio for the variety will give an indication of varietal purity of the grain sample. A significant deviation means that the sample is impure – that is, it is either a different variety or a mixture of varieties.
1000 grain weightEach variety has a published weight for 1000 grains. If the 1000-grain weight calculated from the sample departs from this, it may be an indication that the sample contains a mixture of varieties.
Number of red grainsA grain is considered “red” if more than 25% of its surface area is red-colored or streaked.
Prepare by M Gummert with inputs from JF Rickman (2004); updated by M Gummert (2010) |