Rothamsted is to lead a consortium awarded a total of £600K to develop new rice varieties that can be grown with less water than conventional puddled transplanted rice.
Also involving the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), based in the Philippines, and Punjab Agricultural University, India, the UKRI-funded project will use cutting edge plant breeding technologies, field trials and an image-based system for measuring traits to accelerate the development of new rice plants.
Rice farming is heavily reliant on ready supplies of water and labor. Climate change and urbanization, however, threaten traditional paddy cultivation. In many parts of Asia farmers are switching to direct-seeded rice (DSR) as a more sustainable alternative. This is grown in dry fields, so it uses less water and requires less work. It also cuts out the greenhouse gases that bacteria in paddy fields produce.
But for DSR to be successful, seeds need to germinate quickly and grow vigorously. Current varieties are not best suited to this.
Rothamsted Research, in collaboration with the project partners aims to generate new high-yielding “DSR adapted” rice varieties. Using the latest genetic technologies, new varieties will be rapidly developed and their performance in the field evaluated before being released to farmers.
Project lead Smita Kurup says: “We have already identified in the lab hitherto ‘unknown’ varieties more suitable to DSR in terms of their seedling traits by screening several hundred varieties from the International Rice Genebank at IRRI. As a next step, we want to use these lines to combine with current good yielding and disease resistant rice cultivars to generate new high-yielding “DSR adapted” rice varieties.
“Once we develop these, we will evaluate their field performance at multiple locations. Finally, the most promising breeding lines will be nominated for trails in Asia before releasing to farmers.”
The team at Rothamsted have developed a large-scale, high resolution image-based system to tease out useful traits, along with a ground-breaking approach that allows them to make time-lapse images of germinating rice seeds in the dark, exactly the conditions that a seed would experience when buried in the ground. This enables the researchers to speedily identify the seeds that germinate well and pin down the exact traits that can be incorporated into new varieties.
The project is one of 18 that have been funded as part of UKRI’s GCRF Innovation and Commercialisation Programme, developed to fast track promising research findings into real-world solutions.
UKRI Director of International Development, Helen Fletcher, says: “This is a really exciting opportunity to fund projects through the Global Research Translation awards. Each and every one will make a massive difference to peoples’ lives in communities spread across the world to ensure some of the most challenged communities have a brighter future.
“Over the next year and a half, UK researchers will work with their international counterparts, policy makers, businesses and local organisations to turn promising research into solutions that can be taken forward through various pathways such as spin-out companies and social enterprises to make a positive difference to people who live with the reality of challenges such as climate change, poor sanitation and disease every day.”
Rothamsted Research Director Achim Doberman adds: “I am delighted to see this new project move forward. Rice is the most important staple crop for people in low and lower-middle-income countries, but current cultivation techniques will not be sustainable under a changing climate. Only by accelerating our research into new varieties can we hope to secure sustainable supplies and guarantee a prosperous future for millions of low-income famers.”