India Today

Lost and Found

Traditiona­l rice strains are flourishin­g again

- By Romita Datta

Eight hundred lost strains of rice, including 60 of the most aromatic kind and 50 kinds of red rice with precious medicinal qualities, are set to make a comeback in West Bengal. An indigenous grain revival project at the Agricultur­al Training Centre in Fulia in West Bengal’s Nadia district has already helped cultivate seeds for some 400 varieties for distributi­on to local farmers.

“Once these seeds reach the farmers, Bengal will witness a Green Revolution like in Punjab,” says Anupam Paul, assistant director of agricultur­e at the centre. Paul says the traditiona­l strains, which were once the staple in the state, can be cultivated at two-thirds the cost of raising modern hybrid varieties. These can be grown without chemical fertiliser­s, and after three

The centre in Nadia district helped cultivate seeds for some 400 rice varieties

seasons farmers can use a part of their produce as seeds, he adds.

Paul says agricultur­e minister Purnendu Bose has been avidly backing the project. Of the over 5,500 traditiona­l varieties of paddy recorded through the centuries in Bengal, many may have been lost forever. The centre tracked down several strains in other states. The much-indemand Kerala Sundari variety disappeare­d from its original habitat in Purulia, but still survives in faraway Kerala. Rani Akanda, a highly flavourful variety, was rediscover­ed on farmer Samatul Mondal’s holding in Howrah district.

Poised to reintroduc­e 58 aromatic rice varieties, including some with a big global demand, the state government is looking to transform West Bengal into the ‘aromatic rice bowl of the world’.

 ??  ?? REAPING IT Farmer Samatul Mondal in his fields in Howrah district
REAPING IT Farmer Samatul Mondal in his fields in Howrah district

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