24/01/14

Flood-tolerant rice shows improved yields in India

Swarna_Sub1_rice_Irri_Adam_Barclay_large
Copyright: Adam Barclay / IRRI

Speed read

  • Scientists develop flood-tolerant rice variety that yields nearly 50 per cent more grains
  • The variety is more beneficial to marginal farmers
  • The results have encouraged scientists to release the variety in other Asian countries

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[NEW DELHI] A flood-tolerant hybrid rice that improves yields in India by almost half has been found to benefit marginalised people living in flood-prone areas.

Researchers from the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) and the University of California, Berkeley, US, conducted randomised field trials in 128 villages in the eastern Indian state of Odisha, on Swarna-Sub1 – a new variety that they developed by transferring a gene for flood tolerance, which allows plants to survive under submerged conditions, into Swarna, a rice variety commonly cultivated in India.

The trials showed that yields of Swarna-Sub1 could be 45 per cent higher, even when it was submerged under water for one to two weeks, compared to Swarna. The results were reported in the journal Scientific Reports on 22 November 2013.

The scientists used an advanced genetics technique called 'marker assisted selection' in which they select the precise gene of interest (in this case flood tolerance), by zeroing in on a marker linked to it, which could be a chemical molecule or a piece of genetic material.

The report says that low-lying flood-prone areas tend to be more heavily occupied by people belonging to socially disadvantaged groups. So, a policy-relevant implication of the findings is  that "flood-tolerant rice can deliver both efficiency gains, through reduced yield variability and higher expected yield, and equity gains in disproportionately benefiting the most marginal group of farmers."

Flash floods are common in 44 million hectares where rice is grown in India; and Swarna Sub-1 would prove beneficial if grown in 12-14 million hectares, or almost a third of the rice cultivated area, the report says.

Although other flood-tolerant rice varieties were developed earlier, Swarna-Sub1 is the first to be released to farmers for cultivation, said Manzoor Dhar, lead author of the study and senior associate scientist at IRRI’s New Delhi unit.

Since late 2009, the seed is being provided to randomly-selected farmers in Odisha's coastal districts, which are mainly rainfed lowlands and prone to floods.

The variety has also been released in Bangladesh and Nepal, and in some South-East Asian countries.

J K Roy, former joint director of India’s Central Rice Research Institute, in Cuttack in Odisha and currently nodal scientist with a non-government organisation AID which works with IRRI on flood-tolerant rice projects in Odisha, says that the success in Odisha's coastal districts is being replicated in some other districts in the state, and also in Bihar and Assam states.

Link to paper in Scientific Reports