Improving drought tolerance in rainfed lowland rice: An example from Thailand


Autoria(s): Jongdee, B.; Pantuwan, G.; Fukai, S.; Fischer, K. S.
Contribuinte(s)

B.E. Clothier

W. Dierickx

J. Oster

D. Wicheins

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

A large portion of the world's poor farm in rainfed systems where the water supply is unpredictable and droughts are common. In Thailand there are approximately 6.2 million ha of rain fed lowland rice, which account for 67% of the country's total rice-growing area. This rice system is often characterised by too much and too little water in the same season. Farmers' estimates of their annual losses to drought are as high as 45% in the upper parts of the toposequence. In contrast to irrigated rice systems, gains from crop improvement of rainfed rice have been modest, in part because there has been little effort to breed and select for drought tolerance for the target rainfed environments. The crop improvement strategy being used in Thailand considers three mechanisms that influence yield in the drought prone targets: yield potential as an important mechanism for mild drought (where yield loss is less than 50%), drought escape (appropriate phenology) and drought tolerance traits of leaf water potential, sterility, flower delay and drought response index for more severe drought conditions. Genotypes are exposed to managed drought environments for selection of drought tolerant genotypes. A marker assisted selection (MAS) scheme has been developed and applied for selection of progenies in the backcrossing program. The plant breeding program uses rapid generation advance techniques that enable early yield testing in the target population of environments (TPE) through inter-station (multi-location yield testing) and on-farm trials. A farmer participatory approach has been used to identify the TPE for the breeding program. Four terrace paddy levels have been identified, upper (drought), middle (drought prone to favorable) and lower (flooded). This paper reports the change in the breeding program for the drought prone tainted lowland rice environments of North and Northeast Thailand by incorporating our knowledge on adaptation and on response of rice to drought. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:80189

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier Science Bv

Palavras-Chave #Rainfed Lowland Rice #Drought Tolerance #Genotype-by-environment Interaction #Breeding #Marker Assisted Selection #Farmer Participation #Agronomy #Water Resources #Sativa L. Genotypes #Grain-yield #Environment Interactions #Breeding Strategies #Northeast Thailand #Selection #Resistance #C1 #300201 Plant Biochemistry and Physiology #620103 Rice
Tipo

Journal Article