By Jan Suszkiw
Like people, some plants handle stress better than others.
Now, in a recent issue of Agronomy, a team of Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and university scientists report their identification of U.S. rice varieties with the right "genetic" stuff for coping with reduced water use.
Their efforts dovetail with a trend toward water-saving measures that some growers are implementing in not only Arkansas, which produces half the U.S. rice crop, but also other major rice-growing states, namely Mississippi, Missouri, Louisiana, Texas and California.
Rice is traditionally grown in leveed sections of fields called paddies that can be flooded with water pumped in from rivers, alluvial aquifers, on-farm reservoirs and other sources. Such flooding helps control weeds and ensures the rice crop can attain its maximum yield potential.
However, a number of factors have contributed to growers' increasing interest in alternatives to flooding, including competition for water from other sectors of society such as municipalities and the effects of global climate change such as erratic rainfall, according to two of the Agronomy journal authors, Jai Rohila and Anna McClung, both with ARS' Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center in Stuttgart, Arkansas. Their co-authors on the paper are Christopher Henry with the University of Arkansas and Argelia Lorence with Arkansas State University.
"Reducing water use, which is currently about 30 inches per acre over the season for Arkansas-grown rice, is a necessary step toward sustainable production of rice and food security," added Rohila, an agronomist. "About 80 percent of the irrigation water for the Arkansas rice crop is pumped from the Mississippi River Valley alluvial aquifer."
Over the past four decades, however, the aquifer's water levels have dropped at the rate of 12 to 18 inches per year, Rohila added. Alternate wetting and drying, furrow irrigation, land leveling, tailwater recovery and multiple-inlet irrigation are some of the strategies that growers are investigating or already using to conserve water, in some cases by 20 percent.
There's been a genetic hitch, though, that can lead to grain yield reductions under such measures.
"All current rice varieties in the United States were essentially developed for production under continuous flood irrigation management systems," explained McClung, a supervisory geneticist who directs the ARS center. "We conducted this research to determine what are the traits and genetic resources that can be used to develop new rice cultivars that will have high grain quality and yield under reduced irrigation inputs."
Toward that end, the team designed a series of field experiments in which they subjected 15 different rice cultivars (conventional medium- and long-grain varieties as well as specialty rice) to sub-surface drip irrigation regimens based on one of four soil-moisture scenarios, or "volumetric water contents" (VWCs).
The first scenario was comparable to conventionally flooded field conditions with a VWC of 30 percent. The fourth mimicked a severe water-deficit scenario (VWC 14 percent) capable of triggering catastrophic wilting from which the rice crop can't recover. In between these extremes were two moderate water-deficit scenarios with VWCs of 24 and 20 percent. "This gradient of soil moisture regimes in our study allowed us to assess how well the varieties can respond to varying degrees of water deficit," Rohila explained.
Among the results, the researchers reported that:
- Of 10 total traits (e.g., plant height, flowering time/duration, and "grainfill") they examined, six traits accounted for 35 percent of the variability in the varieties' physiological responses to water stress, including their ability to produce grain.
- Plant height was generally greatest in the first soil-moisture scenario (mimicking flooded fields), except for five of the varieties tested. Grain yields were also highest in the first scenario, except for seven varieties, which performed better in scenarios two and three.
- Unexpectedly, varieties with higher leaf canopy temperatures tended to produce the most grain under water-stress conditions.
- Those same varieties also had genetic origins in tropical or subtropical regions of the world, where heat stress conditions are common, another form of physiological stress.