Projected yields for wheat per acre is usually about 56 bushels. However, some very productive fields can produce as much as twice that amount.
An excellent crop of dry land wheat will yield about 70 bushels and an average crop on irrigated ground will yield about the same.
Wheat can vary from 10,000 to 20,000 kernels per pound, but if one assumes the middle rate at 15,000 per pound, then there would be about 900,000 kernels in a bushel.
It varies from year to year, of course, but it averages about 30 bushels per acre statewide.
276.5 million bushels.
613. By the way, that's a really, really low yield for wheat. Less than 5 bushels per acre.
A lot of guys will tell ya a bushel to a bushel and a half per acre but i like to put out 2 bushels to the acre for a good stand.
How many bushels of what? Corn? Barley? Wheat? Rice? Please be more specific when asking these types of questions.
The average yield of corn per acre in Pennsylvania is approximately 150 bushels. The average soybean yield is 40 bushels per acre.
How many kilograms of what?
50 bushels per acre is not uncommon, depending on the variety and other conditions.
There are about 48.21 bushels of wheat in 60 cubic feet.
Medieval rice farmers in Japan produced about 88 bushels of rice per acre. With today's farming methods as much as 241 bushels per acre are being reported.
A wheat futures contract covers 5000 bushels of whatever wheat (there are different kinds) is specified in the contract.
For the 2009 crop season, Texas' average corn yield was 108 bushels per acre.
There's too many variables here to be able to answer this question. However, just for example, the US average yield from all states of all barley types for the period from 2006 through 2011 is 66.7 bushels per acre, according to the USDA.