Rainy season is here again. The crops, trees, and plants would
gladly bathe under the showers of rain. However, when typhoons
strike and floods flow like a river, the trees would sway and
dance in a fast forward rhythm and plants may drown and die.
But among the plants, one variety of rice can survive flooding.
This rice variety is named sub1 or submergence1, according
to Dr. Dave Mackill, head of the plant breeding, genetics
and biotechnology division of the International Rice Research
Institute (IRRI).
Mackill and other researchers from IRRI and the University
of California in Riverside and in Davis campuses have discovered
from an Indian rice variety FR13A a gene that can withstand
flooding of up to 17 days.
You can watch a time-lapse video of the rice variety from
this IRRI website.
When water does not drain in a couple of days, an ordinary
rice crop would be damaged, Mackill said, as he stressed
that producing the sub1 variety will be relevant and helpful
to farmers.
“Having this gene in the [rice] variety gives the
plant a little bit of protection against flooding and gives
the farmers some insurance policy,” the IRRI scientists
said
He said farmers need not worry about the number of rice
yield. Flooding is even beneficial to the sub1 variety of
rice, which produces five tons for each hectare submerged
for 17 days.
An ordinary rice variety without the sub1 gene produces
less than one ton per hectare, he added.
However, there are slight differences in the physical property
of a sub1 rice variety, he said.
It is shorter, flowers later, and the whole color changes
more than ordinary varieties. The whole of a SWARNA sub1
rice variety also becomes lighter compared to an ordinary
SWARNA variety, which is usually dark.
Mackill said there are no big differences in the taste of
the sub1 rice variety compared with other varieties.
“I’ve only tasted IR64 sub1. It tastes pretty
good. But we haven’t made a detailed comparison of
all the varieties,” said Mackill.
IRRI has been distributing the seeds to farmers for small
scale testing. The seeds may be officially released to some
countries next year, said Mackill.
According to the United Nations Environment Programme, “climate
change is the most critical global challenges of our time,” and
thus abrupt weather changes can affect agriculture, sea-level
rise, and species extinction.