Viable circadian clocks help organisms to synchronize their development with daily and seasonal changes, thereby providing both evolutionary fitness and advantage from an agricultural perspective. A high-resolution mapping approach combined with mutant analysis revealed a cereal ortholog of Arabidopsis thaliana LUX ARRHYTHMO/PHYTOCLOCK 1 (LUX/PCL1) as a promising candidate for the earliness per se 3 (Eps-3A m ) locus in einkorn wheat (Triticum monococcum L.). Using delayed fluorescence measurements it was shown that Eps-3A m containing einkorn wheat accession KT3-5 had a distorted circadian clock. The hypothesis was subsequently confirmed by performing a time course study on central and output circadian clock genes, which showed arrhythmic transcript patterns in KT3-5 under constant ambient conditions, i.e., constant light and temperature. It was also demonstrated that variation in spikelet number between wild-type and mutants is sensitive to temperature, becoming negligible at 25°. These observations lead us to propose that the distorted clock is causative for both early flowering and variation in spike size and spikelet number, and that having a dysfunctional LUX could have neutral, or even positive, effects in warmer climates. To test the latter hypothesis we ascertained sequence variation of LUX in a range of wheat germplasm. We observed a higher variation in the LUX sequence among accessions coming from the warmer climate and a unique in-frame mutation in early-flowering Chinese T. turgidum cultivar 'Tsing Hua no. 559.' Our results emphasize the importance of the circadian clock in temperate cereals as a promising target for adaptation to new environments.T HE circadian clock is an intrinsic regulator of biological processes oscillating within an $24-hr period (Pittendrigh 1993). It is considered to be the main mechanism by which plants recognize the optimal photoperiod for seasonal flowering (Imaizumi 2009). Transcriptional regulation of the circadian clock has been well described in Arabidopsis (Pokhilko et al. 2012) with the latest model emphasizing the importance of the Evening Complex (EC) composed of EARLY FLOWERING 3, EARLY FLOWERING 4, and LUX AR-RHYTHMO/PHYTOCLOCK 1 (ELF3, ELF4, and LUX/PCL1) proteins (Onai and Ishiura 2005;Nusinow et al. 2011;Pokhilko et al. 2012). The EC directly represses the function of PSEUDO RESPONSE REGULATOR 9 (PRR9) and acts antagonistically to the elements expressed in the morning, including LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY) and CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED 1 (CCA1) (Pokhilko et al. 2012). LHY, CCA1, and PRR9 form the so-called morning loop, which becomes arrhythmic when the EC is impaired (Hazen et al. 2005; Dixon et al. 2011; Nusinow Copyright © 2014 Dixon et al. 2011;Pokhilko et al. 2012). Genetic studies have shown that the recently cloned maturity-a, (mat-a; syn. early maturity 8, eam8) locus is an ortholog of AtELF3 in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). eam8 appears to be epistatic to eam10 (syn. ea sp ), which in turn seems to be a possible ortholog of LUX/PCL...