Rice Today Vol. 14, No. 2
Rice Today Vol. 14, No. 2
Rice Today Vol. 14, No. 2
org
Celebrating 50 years of
rice research in India
What kind of rice do consumers want?
Rice in Latin America on the world stage
Rice yield rises with WeRise
US$5.00 ISSN 1655-5422
contents
EDITORIAL: CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF IMPACT
THROUGH RICE RESEARCH IN INDIA.................. 4
NEWS.......................................................................... 5
RICE TODAY AROUND THE WORLD......................... 9
INDIAN FARMER KICK-STARTS TWO
GREEN REVOLUTIONS........................................ 10
INDIA-IRRI TIMELINE SPANS THE DECADES........ 12
REGIONAL COOPERATION SPEEDS UP THE
RELEASE OF RICE VARIETIES............................. 14
A SCHOOLBOY AT HEART: CELEBRATED INDIAN
SCIENTIST SPEAKS HIS MIND............................ 16
RICE SCIENTISTS FROM INDIA
HELPING AFRICA................................................ 20
MAPS........................................................................ 38
What kind of rice do consumers want?
STRIKING A BALANCE THROUGH ECOLOGICALLY
ENGINEERED RICE ECOSYSTEMS...................... 40
RICE FACTS............................................................... 43
India reaches the pinnacle in rice exports
GRAINS OF TRUTH.................................................. 46
WHATS COOKING................................................... 33
Home-made noodles from Ghana
WHAT LATIN AMERICAS RICE SECTOR OFFERS
THE WORLD......................................................... 34
AVERTING HUNGER IN EBOLA-HIT
COUNTRIES.......................................................... 36
Subbanna Ayyappan
Director general
Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)
Secretary of the Department of Agricultural
Research and Education (DARE), Ministry of
Agriculture of India, and
Member, IRRI Board of Trustees (2013-15)
Robert S. Zeigler
Director general
International Rice
Research Institute
News
AFRICARICE
AFRICARICE
Source: http://africarice.blogspot.com
Source: http://www.edf.org
million tons of high-quality rice, accounting for 52% of total exports, and
44% higher than in 2013. Customers
in the Europe, North America, Asia,
and Africa have increased import
of Vietnamese rice thanks to good
marketing. But the ministry points
out that V
ietnamese rice varieties
face challenges when trying to enter
quality-conscious markets.
Source: http://vietnamnews.vn
IRRI
IRRI
IRRI
Over the 3
years of field trials,
the leading rice
line with Arcadias
NUE trait outyielded control
lines by an average
of 27%. The trials
included both
irrigated lowland
and rainfed upland
locations. In the
third year trial
at 50% of normal
applied nitrogen
fertilizer, the leading NUE rice line
out-produced the control line by
33%. The previous two years trials
CIAT
Sp
www.irri.org
Ri I Cecial
ce nt eleb 52
Co ern rati -pag
ng at ng th e is
re ion e sue:
ss a
20 l
06
ISSN 1655-5422
www.irri.org
www.irri.org
Date
28 July
Application deadline
28 May
7-20 June
6 April
10-28 August
25 June
8 September
8 July
28 September-9 October
28 July
12-23 October
12 August
27-29 October
27 August
2-13 November
27 August
9-13 November
2 September
9-13 November
9 September
9-13 November
9 September
24-26 November
24 September
3 December
3 October
For inquiries, contact [email protected], [email protected], or [email protected]. Phone: (63-2) 580-5600 ext 2538 or +639178639317; fax: (63-2) 580-5699, 891-1292, or
845-0606; mailing address: The IRRI Training Center, DAPO Box 7777, Metro Manila, Philippines (Attention: TC Course Coordinator); Web site: www.training.irri.org.
Note: Fees and schedules are subject to change without prior notice.
GREEN
NEKKANTI SUBBA
RAO helped kickstart both the first
and second Green
Revolutions in India
by promoting and
distributing IR8 in
1967 and SwarnaSub1 in 2009.
REVOLUTIONS
A farmer-scientist
No stranger to IRRI
IRRI
by Gene Hettel
IRRI ARCHIVES
Indian farmer
kick-starts two
1965
1967
1968
1981
2003
2006
2007
2015
12
2008
2009
1982
M.S. Swaminathanbecame
IRRIs fourth director general. He
later won numerous honors and
awards. In 1987, Swaminathan
Hall at IRRI headquarters was
dedicated in his honor. In 1991,
he won the John and Alice
Tyler Prize for Environmental
Achievementand the Honda
Prize. In 1999, he was named
among the 20 most influential
Asians of the 20th century by Time
magazine.
1986
1996
2002
Over the last five decades, this selection from IRRIs historical timeline (online at www.
irri.org/about-us/our-history) has many Indian connections tied to people and events.
2011
2012
2013
Coromandel International
Limitedsigned a memorandum of
understanding with IRRI for cooperation
in promoting and disseminating improved
rice research technologies in India.
As part of the2013-16 IRRI-India
Work Plan,the Institute and theTamil
Nadu Agricultural University signed
a memorandum of understanding to
promote research, training, and exchange
of information and technology on rice and
its farming systems and value chains.
Bayer CropScience, IRRI, and
ICAR sponsored an inaugural 2-dayRice
Future Forumin New Delhi.Bas
Bouman, director of Global Rice Science
Partnership, was one of the presenters.
Senior officials from IndiasMinistry
of Agriculture visited IRRI for a 2-day
series of awareness and consultation
meetings, particularly to discussSTRASA.
13
Regional cooperation
speeds up the release
of rice varieties
by Lanie Reyes
A historic moment
Results to boot
INDIA, BANGLADESH,
Nepal, and IRRI seal
the deal. From left,
S.M. Nazmul Islam,
Bangladesh; Robert
Zeigler, IRRI director
general; Jaya Mukunda
Khanal, Nepal; and
Ashish Bahuguna, India.
Rice Today April-June 2015
WORKING TOGETHER
(from left) India's
Ashish Bahuguna and
Bangladesh's Matia
Chowdhury and Monzur
Hossain.
Rice Today April-June 2015
A schoolboy at heart:
he legendary Ebrahimali Abubacker Siddiq, 78, began his long and enduring rice research career in 1968 as a cytogeneticist at
the Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) in New Delhi, including 7 years there as a senior scientist. In 1983-86, he spent
3 years as a breeder for the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in Egypt. Returning to IARI, he was appointed professor
of genetics (1986-87).
In late 1987, he became project director at the Directorate of Rice Research (DRR). In 1994, he assumed the position of deputy
director general (crop science) of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR). In 2000-05, he served as a member of the
Institutes Board of Trustees from 2000 to 2005. His 35 years of research in plant breeding contributed to the development and
release of high-yielding semidwarf basmati and nonbasmati varieties, which have boosted rice production in India.
Upon retirement from his regular ICAR service in 1997, ICAR named him a national professor (1997-2002). In 2002, he joined the
Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics of the Department of Biotechnology, in which he served as the Distinguished Chair
until 2007, when he continued there as an adjunct scientist. He is also an adjunct professor at the University of Hyderabad and IARI
and is an honorary professor of biotechnology at Acharya NG Ranga Agricultural University in Hyderabad.
Here are some excerpts from his pioneer interview conducted in April 2014 in Hyderabad.
16
characteristic of basmati rice is a complex genetic trait. Nearly all the physicochemical properties of starch are not
simply inherited. Combining all the
quality features of traditional basmati
in a high-yielding background,
therefore, was not an easy task.
At one stage of the breeding
process, some people commented,
You are working for so many years
still, youre not coming out with
high-yielding basmati varieties.
While visiting the field, one critic
sarcastically asked, Should we bring
in Norman Borlaug (the father of
the Green Revolution) to develop the
kind of basmati rice you are trying to
achieve for so long?
I was hurt by this remark and
was compelled to respond that, with
all respect to Norman Borlaug, I told
him in the presence of many that you
can bring not one, but many Borlaugs,
but it will not make any difference
in progress, given the complex trait
we are dealing with. I explained
how difficult and time-consuming
it is to combine so many complexly
inherited indices of basmati quality
in a high-yielding background. I
remember how I, along with my
small staff, used to be in the field
all day selecting productive plant
types in the breeding populations
and the long hours we spent into
the night cooking rice to evaluate
the promising lines for the desired
quality trait combination.
DURING THE 49th Annual Rice Group Meetings of the All India Coordinated Rice Improvement Project, last
year in Hyderabad, Dr. Siddiq (right) confers with Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton, head of IRRIs T.T. Chang
Genetic Resources Center.
17
BASMATI RICE is believed to have been cultivated on the Indian Subcontinent for centuries. The term is of
Sanskrit origin ("vasmati"), meaning "fragrant".
Adding biotechnology to
the toolbox
Apply now!
The Lee Foundation Rice Scholarship Program is offering
scholarship grants to students pursuing their PhD in fields
allied with the rice sciences.
Research areas
Gene discovery and bioinformatics
Modern rice breeding
Rice systems of the future
Economics and policy
Types of scholarship
45 years for a full PhD program
Scholarship benefits
Round-trip airfare and related travel expenses
Monthly stipend with local medical and
accident insurance
Research support
Leadership and professional development
University fees
The grant supports a 45-year PhD program that will be pursued jointly at IRRI and at the
Department of Crop Sciences (http://cropsci. illinois.edu/) and the Illinois Plant Breeding Center
(http://plantbreeding.illinois.edu/) of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The Lee Foundation Rice Scholarship Program aims to educate and train a new generation of young rice scientists and researchers
to help feed Asia. This exciting new program offers young South and Southeast Asians a unique opportunity to gain excellent
education from reputable academic institutions. It is anticipated that they will be part of a new science leadership in the region and
build key partnerships for over 20-25 years.
How to apply
19
Senthilkumar Kalimuthu:
A stargazer with feet firmly
planted on the ground
by Savitri Mohapatra
20
Senthilkumar is coordinating
the activities of the Agronomy
and Mechanization Task Forces
convened by AfricaRice in Eastern
and Southern Africa. He is also
monitoring rice R&D activities in 12
rice sector development hubs across
Tanzania, Uganda, Madagascar,
Rwanda, and Ethiopia, where he
has trained more than 200 rice
researchers and 350 rice farmers
in rice agronomy, of which 40%
are women. He is also supervising
students, research assistants, and
some researchers.
His studies and experience are
helping him to realize his dream of
becoming an eminent agronomist.
Importantly, the lessons that he
learned during his childhood
from his mother on their farm are
continuing to guide his footsteps.
Recounting one such lesson,
he said that, when he was walking
on their farm with his mother, his
feet would press on roots of rice
plants. He was worried that he was
damaging the plants. But his mother
assured him that destroying rice
roots a little would produce more
tillers and more yield. I didnt
understand at that time. But now,
through my experiments, I see how
the roots get pruned by mechanical
weeding. This helps increase rice
tillering and yield.
Ms. Mohapatra is the head of Marketing
and Communications at AfricaRice.
21
22
ENTRANCE TO the
DRR Rice Museum
in Hyderabad.
23
24
A section of the panoramic mural housed at the Rice Museum of the Directorate of Rice Research in Hyderabad, India. It depicts how rice farmers lives are
governed by the seasonal rhythms of growing the crop. See the previous
page
for more
background.
Rice
Today
April-June
2015
25
DRR
IRRI
26
THE FIRST joint coordinators of AICRIP were S.V.S. Shastry (right) and Wayne Freeman.
CMS or cytoplasmic genetic male sterile is aplant's inablity to produce functional pollen. It is an important tool in hybrid seed production. Hybrids often exhibit
heterosis or hybrid vigor, whereby the traits of a hybrid progeny are enhanced as a result of the genetic combination of its parents.
27
IRRI
SINCE 1989 when ICAR implemented a national program on hybrid rice development, IRRI researchers
have contributed much to improving this technology, which can greatly increase Indias rice production
and farmers income.
EAST INDIAN rice farmers are now meeting their food security needs with
climate-smart varieties, such as drought-tolerant Sahbhagi dhan. See
Creating an oasis with rice on pages 10-11 of Rice Today, Vol. 13, No. 2.
WeRise
by Keiichi Hayashi, Anita Boling,
and Tsutomu Ishimaru
Rice roulette
K. HAYASHI (3)
A weather-rice-nutrient decision
support app is helping farmers
ensure yield in rainfed areas
A user-friendly tool
31
32
Noodle extruder
Whats cooking?
Bon apptit!
Watch Ms. Agbezudor prepare the home-made rice noodles in a 5-minute video on YouTube at
http://goo.gl/xZFG9y.
Rice Today April-June 2015
33
WORLD
by Adriana Varn Molina
An international
technology festival
A world-stage performance
Ingredients of a
production miracle
36
pril is the cruelest
month, wrote
T.S. Eliot in The Waste
Land. It was as if
he were voicing the sentiments of
the farming communities in Ebolaaffected countriesLiberia, Sierra
Leone, and Guinea. Though the
time for planting has come, there is
a desperate lack of labor and inputs,
particularly seed, as hungry rice
farmers ate the seeds they would
have normally stored for planting in
April.
Although there are signs that the
Ebola epidemic is being contained
in the three countries, a major food
crisis is looming unless urgent steps
are taken to tackle food security
concerns, according to 2014 reports
by the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) and
the World Food Programme (WFP).
According to their estimates,
the Ebola virus outbreak left slightly
more than half a million people in
the three countries severely food
insecure120,000 in Sierra Leone,
170,000 in Liberia, and 230,000 in
Guinea.
The total number of affected
people could double to one million in
a few months unless urgent measures
are taken to significantly enhance
access to food and safeguard crop
and livestock production in these
countries, they warned.
The crisis has been further
aggravated because Liberia and Sierra
Leone were still recovering from
prolonged civil wars while Guinea
was still transitioning from military
rule when Ebola struck.
In December 2014, the
government of Sierra Leone banned
all public celebrations, including
Christmas and New Year, to
prevent Ebola from spreading
further. Similarly, Guinea, where
the latest Ebola outbreak started
recently, declared a 45-day health
by Savitri Mohapatra
Maps
28%
Socio
economic
eco
o c
class
72%
11%
26%
93%
18%
21%
27%
33%
24%
Bangladesh
100% 7%
0%
23%
27%
1cm
A(upper)
A(upper)
B
C(middle)
(
)
C (middle)
C(middle)
D&E(lower)
29%
EastIndia
16%
Preferencesof
respondentswho
considersize aspriority
trait
27%
bold
Preferencesof
respondents who
respondentswho
considershape as
prioritytrait
medium
12%
longto
extralong
50%
shortmedium
2%
34%
D&E(lower)
Bangladesh
38%
46%
short
longto
extralong
2%
27%
22%
32%
mediumlongto
extralong
6%
38%
70%
slender
Proportionof
respondents who
respondentswho
consideraroma as
prioritytrait
SouthIndia
23%
61%
shortmedium
18%
61%
37%
75%
20%
14%
Consumer
preferences for grain size in different cities in East India
ConsumerpreferencesforgrainsizeindifferentcitiesinEastIndia
38
Gender
SouthIndia
MARK LENNOX
EastIndia
Familysize
cc
Profile of respondents
Profileofrespondents
13%
29%
71%
Longtoextralong
Medium
80%
Short
21%
Base: respondents
Base:Respondentswho
who
consider size as a
consider
priority
trait.
sizeasaprioritytrait
6%
9%
Calcutta
Dhanbad
n=116
n=67
31%
24%
31%
40%
45%
Patna
Bhubaneshwar
n=92
29%
n=127
71%
Guwahati
n=23
39
by Finbarr Horgan, James Michael Villegas, Angelee Fame Ramal, Carmen Bernal, Alexandra Jamoralin,
John Michael Pasang, Corazon Arroyo, Virginia Agreda, and Gregorio Orboc
40
41
Rice facts
india reaches
the pinnacle in
rice exports
by Samarendu Mohanty
CSISA
www.businessandeconomy.org/30092012/storyd.asp?sid=7042&pageno=1.
www.theglobalist.com/us-india-dealing-with-monsoon-failure/.
43
Rice facts
india reaches
the pinnacle in
rice exports
CSISA
by Samarendu Mohanty
1
2
www.businessandeconomy.org/30092012/storyd.asp?sid=7042&pageno=1.
www.theglobalist.com/us-india-dealing-with-monsoon-failure/.
43
Million tons
30
25
Rice
Wheat
Corn
20
Exports
15
10
2013
2011
2009
2005
2003
2001
1999
2007
Imports
1997
1995
1993
1991
1989
1987
1985
1983
1979
1977
1975
1973
1971
1969
1967
1965
10
1963
1961
1981
15
Fig. 1. Indias transformation in grain trade, the shift from grain importing to grain exporting.
Source: Production, Supply, and Distribution (PSD), USDA.
Million tons
70
Northwest
60
East
50
40
30
20
10
0
2004-05
2005-06
2006/07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
Year
Fig. 2. Eastern vs northwestern India rice production.*
Source: www.Indiastat.com.
*Eastern India includes Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand; northwestern India includes
Punjab and Haryana.
http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2015/02/03/indias-food-security-threatened-by-groundwater-depletion/.
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2015-03-02/news/59683948_1_direct-cash-subsidy-lpg-subsidy-grain-distribution.
45
Grains of truth
CMS is acondition of inablity of a plant to produce functional pollen. It is an important tool in hybrid seed production. Hybrids often exhibit heterosis or hybrid
vigor, whereby the traits of a hybrid progeny are enhanced as a result of the genetic combination of its parents.
46
s documented in this
issue of Rice Today, India
and IRRI have had a very
successful relationship
over the decades. The introduction of
rice variety IR8, which helped save
India from a massive famine in the
1970s, marked the true beginning of
the success of the partnership. Then,
some remarkable results followed
such as the development of more
than 400 disease- and insect-resistant
rice varieties, hybrid rice varieties
bred through public and private
sector programs, streamlined rice
production practices, and improved
postharvest technologies for better
sustainability and productivity.
Both ICAR and IRRI have
trained scientists, providing
equitable access to information, and
conducting socioeconomic research.
India has been actively part of IRRIs
priority setting, strategic planning,
providing scientific advice, and
carrying out research work in the
region. Senior Indian scientists and
government officials have served
almost continuously on IRRIs
Board of Trustees since its creation.
Indeed, the partnership has achieved
outstanding resultssetting a gold
standard in international research
collaboration.
As the India-IRRI collaboration
has matured, so have the needs,
expectations, and environment of
doing business in relation to what is
happening not only in India but also
regionally and globally. India has a
strong national rice research program
and has increasing participation by
the private sector and civil society
organizations. IRRI should not take
over functions that the public or
private sector should have in the
country. Our comparative advantage
is strong in science and innovation,
48