North America Non-native Plant

Karamyschev’s Wheat

Botanical name: Triticum karamyschevii

USDA symbol: TRKA3

Habit: grass

Native status: Not native but doesn't reproduce and persist in the wild

Synonyms: Triticum palaeocolchicum Menabde (TRPA18)   

Karamyschev’s Wheat: An Elusive Member of the Wheat Family If you’ve stumbled across the name Karamyschev’s wheat (Triticum karamyschevii), you’ve encountered one of botany’s more mysterious characters. This obscure member of the wheat family has left plant enthusiasts scratching their heads, as reliable information about this species is surprisingly scarce. ...

Karamyschev’s Wheat: An Elusive Member of the Wheat Family

If you’ve stumbled across the name Karamyschev’s wheat (Triticum karamyschevii), you’ve encountered one of botany’s more mysterious characters. This obscure member of the wheat family has left plant enthusiasts scratching their heads, as reliable information about this species is surprisingly scarce.

What We Know (And Don’t Know)

Karamyschev’s wheat belongs to the grass family, like all wheats, and shares the botanical classification with other graminoid plants. It’s also known by the synonym Triticum palaeocolchicum Menabde, which might give you a clue about its possible geographic connections – though even this remains unclear.

Here’s where things get tricky: despite its official botanical name, comprehensive information about Triticum karamyschevii is extremely limited in accessible botanical literature. This could mean several things:

  • It may be an extinct or nearly extinct species
  • It could be limited to a very specific geographic region with minimal botanical study
  • It might exist primarily in historical botanical collections rather than active cultivation

The Geographic Mystery

Unfortunately, the exact native range and geographic distribution of Karamyschev’s wheat remain unknown in readily available sources. The synonym referencing palaeocolchicum might suggest historical connections to the Colchis region (modern-day Georgia and surrounding areas), but this requires further botanical verification.

Should You Try to Grow It?

Here’s the honest truth: finding Karamyschev’s wheat for your garden would be like searching for a botanical unicorn. With so little information available about its growing requirements, hardiness zones, or even current availability, this isn’t a plant you’re likely to encounter at your local nursery – or probably anywhere else, for that matter.

If you’re interested in growing wheat species in your garden, consider these better-documented alternatives:

  • Common wheat varieties suitable for home cultivation
  • Ancient wheat species like emmer or einkorn
  • Ornamental grasses that provide similar aesthetic appeal

The Takeaway

Karamyschev’s wheat serves as a reminder that the botanical world still holds mysteries. While we can’t provide growing tips or garden design advice for this elusive species, its very existence (however unclear) highlights the incredible diversity within plant families – and sometimes, the gaps in our collective botanical knowledge.

If you’re a serious botanical researcher or have access to specialized germplasm collections, you might have better luck tracking down information about this wheat. For the rest of us backyard gardeners, it remains one of those fascinating footnotes in the vast catalog of plant species.

Karamyschev’s Wheat

Classification

Group

Monocot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Liliopsida - Monocotyledons

Subclass

Commelinidae

Order

Cyperales

Family

Poaceae Barnhart - Grass family

Genus

Triticum L. - wheat

Species

Triticum karamyschevii Nevski - Karamyschev's wheat

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA