Fiji Sun

Third-Generation Hybrid Rice Achieves High Yields in China Xinhua

China now feeds around 20 per cent of the world’s population with less than 9 per cent of the world’s arable land.

- nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.com.fj

The third-generation hybrid rice developed by Yuan Longping, the “father of hybrid rice,” and his team underwent its first public yield monitoring from Monday to Tuesday and achieved high output.

The final yield of the tested variety, G3-1S/P19, came to 1046.3 kg per mu (about 667 square meters), based on two plots of land in Qingzhu Village under the city of Hengyang in central China’s Hunan Province.

Experts agreed that the rice has a stout stem, fertilizer tolerance, lodging resistance, large spike and more grains.

“One of the most important characteri­stics of the third-generation hybrid rice is that it has a shorter growing period,” said Qian Qian, deputy director of the China National Rice Research Institute. Mr Qian said some previous highyieldi­ng hybrid rice varieties in China took 160 to even 180 days from sowing to harvesting, while the figure was shortened to around 125 days for the new variety. “A shorter growth period can reduce the use of pesticides and fertilizer­s, thus reducing cost and improving production efficiency,” Mr Qian said.

Unlike the previous two generation­s that required a large amount of water and fertilizer­s as well as demanding growing conditions and technologi­cal support, the third-generation hybrid rice is easier to be cultivated by ordinary farmers.

Growing rice in China

The soil, altitude and climate of the test site were not “ideal conditions” carefully selected beforehand but were close to the paddies of ordinary farmers, according to Zhao Bingran with Hunan hybrid rice research centre.

The whole process was organised by the Hunan Society of Agronomy under the supervisio­n of experts from the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, the China National Rice Research Institute, Hunan’s agricultur­e and rural affairs department and multiple Chinese universiti­es.

At present, China’s average yield of rice is about 500 kg per mu. Ordinary farmers can produce 600 kg to 700 kg of rice per mu by growing some excellent second-generation hybrid rice varieties, said Li Xinqi, a researcher with Hunan hybrid rice research centre. “However, under the same planting conditions and environmen­t, the yield of the third-generation hybrid rice could reach 800 kg per mu,” Mr Li added.

China now feeds around 20 percent of the world’s population with less than 9 per cent of the world’s arable land.

Mr Yuan, who developed the world’s first hybrid rice in the 1970s, has set multiple world records in hybrid rice yields in previous years, making great contributi­ons to the food security of China and the world.

“We hope to promote the planting of 100 million mu of the third-generation hybrid rice in China in the short term and increase grain production by 20 billion kg, and apply the technology into the research of sea rice,” Mr Li said.

“In the medium and long term, we hope to increase the planting area of hybrid rice by 70 per cent worldwide.”

At present, Mr Yuan’s team has nine third-generation hybrid rice combinatio­ns under trial, which are expected to achieve commercial seed production in the following three to four years.

“The third-generation hybrid rice has the comprehens­ive strength to promote a greener and more sustainabl­e developmen­t of China’s rice production with higher quality and yield,” Mr Yuan said.

 ??  ?? Yuan Longping, the “father of hybrid rice.
Yuan Longping, the “father of hybrid rice.

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