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> 12 Jul 2004 14:11:58 -0000

 

> Two Rice Better than One

> press-release

>

>

> The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

> Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

>

> General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing

> List

> press-release ISIS Director

> m.w.ho

>

========================================================

>

>

> Rice wars

>

>

> Rice, the staple food crop for more than half the

> world's

> population, among them the poorest, is the current

> target of

> genetic modification, an activity that has greatly

> intensified after the rice genome was announced two

> years

> ago (see " Rice is life " series, SiS 15, Summer 2002

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis15.php ). Since

> then,

> all major biotech giants are investing in rice

> research.

>

> At the same time, a low-input cultivation system

> that really

> benefits small farmers worldwide has been spreading,

> but is

> dismissed by the scientific establishment as

> " unscientific " .

> This is one among several recent innovations that

> increase

> yields and ward off disease without costly and

> harmful

> inputs, all enthusiastically and widely adopted by

> farmers.

>

> A war is building up between the corporate

> establishment and

> the peoples of the world for the possession of rice.

> The

> food security of billions is at stake, as is their

> right to

> grow the varieties of rice they have created and

> continue to

> create, and in the manner they choose.

>

> This extended series will not be appearing all at

> once, so

> look out for it. Fantastic Rice Yields Fact or

> Fallacy?

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/RiceWars.php

> Top Indian Rice Geneticist Rebuts SRI critics

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/TIRGRSRI.php

> Does SRI work?

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DSRIW.php

> Corporate Patents vs People in GM Rice

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/CPVPIGMR.php

> Promises and Perils of GM Rice

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/PPGMR.php

> Two Rice Better Than One

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/TRBTO.php

>

>

> ISIS Press Release 12/07/04

> Two Rice Better than One

> ************************

>

> Lim Li Ching reports on remarkable results from a

> simple

> experiment in China that combats rice disease and

> increases

> yields

>

> The sources for this article are posted on ISIS

> members'

> website http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/TRBTOFull.php.

> Details

> here.

>

> Planting a diversity of crops instead of

> monocultures can do

> wonders. Thousands of Chinese rice farmers have

> increased

> yields and nearly eliminated the most devastating

> disease -

> rice blast fungus - without using chemical

> fungicides or

> spending more money.

>

> These farmers and extension workers in Yunnan

> Province

> collaborated with a team of scientists from Yunnan

> Agricultural University, the Plant Protection

> Stations of

> Honghe Prefecture, Jianshui County and Shiping

> County in

> Yunnan Province, the International Rice Research

> Institute

> and Oregon State University in the United States to

> implement a simple change in cultivation practice in

> order

> to control rice blast, a disease that destroys

> millions of

> tonnes of rice and costs farmers several billion

> dollars in

> losses each year.

>

> The area is prone to rice blast epidemics because of

> its

> cool, wet climate. The fungus that causes blast

> disease,

> Magnaporthe grisea, spreads through multiple cycles

> of

> asexual spore production during the cropping season,

> causing

> necrotic spots on leaves and necrosis (death) of the

> rice

> panicles.

>

> Instead of planting large stands of a single type of

> rice,

> as had been their usual practice, the farmers

> planted a

> mixture of two different kinds of rice: a standard

> hybrid

> rice that does not usually succumb to rice blast,

> and a much

> more valuable but lower-yielding glutinous or

> 'sticky' rice

> known to be very susceptible to the disease. Before

> 1998,

> 98% of rice fields in the area were monocultures of

> the

> hybrid rice varieties Shanyuo22 and Shanyuo63. The

> glutinous

> varieties, although highly valued, were planted in

> small

> amounts due to their low yields and vulnerability to

> rice

> blast.

>

> The experiment with mixed varieties dispersed single

> rows of

> glutinous rice between groups of four rows of hybrid

> rice,

> but at a rate sufficient to meet the local demand

> for

> glutinous rice. As rice is hand-harvested in Yunnan,

> farmers

> can easily separate the hybrid and glutinous grains,

> which

> are used for different purposes.

>

> In 1998, the first year of the trial, four different

>

> mixtures of varieties were planted over 812

> hectares,

> comprising all the rice fields in five townships of

> Shiping

> County, Yunnan Province. The mixtures gave excellent

> blast

> control, such that only one foliar fungicide spray

> was

> applied. The study expanded to 3 342 hectares in

> 1999,

> encompassing all the rice fields in 10 townships of

> Jianshui

> and Shiping Counties. No fungicidal spray was needed

> that

> year. Farmers were so convinced of the benefits of

> the rice

> diversification program that the practice expanded

> to more

> than 40 000 hectares in 2000.

>

> The mixed rice fields were compared with control

> monoculture

> plots. The overall results showed that

> disease-susceptible

> rice varieties planted in mixtures with resistant

> varieties

> had 89% greater yield and blast was 94% less severe

> than

> when they were grown in monoculture. Both glutinous

> and

> hybrid rice showed decreased infection.

>

> Specifically, in 1998, panicle blast severity on the

>

> glutinous rice averaged 20% in monocultures, but was

> reduced

> to 1% when dispersed within the mixed populations.

> Meanwhile, panicle blast severity on the hybrid

> varieties

> averaged 1.2% in monocultures, but was reduced to

> varying

> degrees in the mixed plots. Results from 1999 were

> very

> similar to the 1998 season for panicle blast

> severity on

> susceptible glutinous varieties, showing that the

> effect of

> mixed planting was very robust. Panicle blast

> severity on

> the less-susceptible hybrid varieties averaged 2.3%

> in

> monoculture in 1999, and was reduced to 1.0% in

> mixed

> plantings. This despite the fact that the hybrids

> were

> planted at the same density in mixed and monoculture

> plots.

>

> The hypothesis for the reduced severity of blast

> attack is

> fairly clear for the disease-susceptible glutinous

> rice. If

> one variety of a crop is susceptible to a disease,

> the more

> concentrated those susceptible types, the more

> easily the

> disease will spread. The disease is less likely to

> spread if

> susceptible plants are separated by other plants

> that do not

> succumb to the disease and the distance between the

> susceptible plants increased (a dilution effect). In

>

> addition, the glutinous rice plants, which are

> taller and

> rise above the shorter hybrid rice, enjoyed sunnier,

> warmer

> and drier conditions that discouraged the growth of

> rice

> blast.

>

> Disease reduction in the hybrid variety is more

> difficult to

> explain, but is possibly due to the taller glutinous

> rice

> physically blocking the airborne spores of rice

> blast and/or

> altering wind patterns. It is also likely that there

> was

> greater 'induced resistance' playing a part in

> disease

> suppression. Induced resistance occurs when

> non-virulent

> pathogens induce a plant defence response that is

> effective

> against other pathogens that would normally be

> virulent on

> the plant. Indeed, preliminary analysis of the

> genetic

> composition of pathogenic populations indicated that

> mixed

> fields supported diverse pathogen populations with

> no single

> dominant strain. By contrast, pathogen populations

> in

> monocultures were dominated by one or a few strains.

> Hence,

> the more diverse pathogen population of the mixed

> stands may

> have contributed to greater induced resistance in

> the

> plants, and in the longer term this increased

> pathogen

> diversity may also slow down the adaptation of

> pathogens to

> the resistant genes functioning within a given mixed

> plant

> population.

>

> Grain production per hill of glutinous varieties in

> mixtures

> averaged 89% more than when planted in monoculture.

> As a

> result, although glutinous rice in mixtures was

> planted at

> rates of only 9.2 and 9.7% that of monoculture in

> 1998 and

> 1999, respectively, it produced an average 18.2% of

> monoculture yield. The higher yields are certainly

> due to

> the reduced severity of rice blast fungus, though

> other

> factors (for example, improved light interception)

> may also

> have contributed. Hybrids planted in mixtures,

> despite

> facing an increased overall plant density,

> experienced grain

> yields per hectare that were nearly equal to the

> hybrid

> monocultures. Thus, mixed populations produced more

> total

> grain per hectare than their corresponding

> monocultures in

> all cases.

>

> The mixed varieties of rice were also more

> ecologically

> efficient. It was estimated that an average of 1.18

> hectares

> of monoculture cropland would be needed to provide

> the same

> amounts of hybrid and glutinous rice as were

> produced in one

> hectare of a mixture. Additionally, after accounting

> for the

> different market values of the two rice types, the

> gross

> value per hectare of the mixtures was 14% greater

> than

> hybrid monocultures and 40% greater than glutinous

> monocultures.

>

> The scientists concluded that intra-specific crop

> diversification is a simple, ecological approach to

> disease

> control, which can be extremely effective over a

> large area

> and can contribute to sustainable crop production.

>

>

>

>

========================================================

>

> This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/TRBTO.php

>

>

> If you like this original article from the Institute

> of

> Science in Society, and would like to continue

> receiving

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>

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>

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> on

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> General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing

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> press-release ISIS Director

> m.w.ho

>

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