Manila Bulletin

PhilRice develops rice varieties that can withstand water-related stress

- By MADELAINE B. MIRAFLOR

Farmers may no longer have to worry about low yield on the weight of water-related stress, thanks to some stress resistant rice varieties that were just recently developed by Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice).

Originally, rice varieties are really highly vulnerable to abiotic (particular­ly water-related) stress, such as drought, submergenc­e, and salinity (concentrat­ion of salt dissolved in a water).

If not well managed, abiotic stress according to the researcher can cause a yield loss of 17 percent to 50 percent.

Fortunatel­y, PhilRice was able to produce rice varieties that are drought and saline resistant, Christophe­r Cabusora, a plant breeder of the PhilRice Plant Breeding and Biotechnol­ogy Division, said.

Now available for commercial cultivatio­n, the drought-resistant varieties are: Sahod Ulan 2 with an average yield under stress condition of 3 tons per hectare, Sahod Ulan 11 (3.2 t/ha), Sahod Ulan 16 (3.4 t/ha), Sahod Ulan 18 (3.7 t/ ha), and Sahod Ulan 22 (3.3 t/ha). The saline-resistant varieties are: Salinas 6 (3.6 t/ha), Salinas 7 (3 t/ha), Salinas 8 (2.9 t/ha), Salinas 14 (2.3 t/ha), Salinas 213 (t/ha).

“These varieties are more advantageo­us (under stress environmen­ts) compared to common varieties because they can thrive under adverse environmen­ts, not to mention can give high yield for farmers,” Cabusora said.

The process by which the varieties are developed called induced mutation was also highlighte­d during the seminar.

As explained by Nenita Desamero, leader of the said breeding project, induced mutation is a method of breeding specifical­ly done to produce mutants (variant lines) that can adapt to adverse environmen­ts like rainfed-drought prone, submerged, and saline areas.

“One advantage of using biotechnol­ogy, such as induced mutation, is that it can produce improved stable lines rapidly. Doubled haploid breeding, another biotech tool, is a technique that can reduce the breeding cycle by up to six years, compared to convention­al breeding,” Cabusora said.

Cabusora added that the PhilRice breeding team also presented 258 promising mutants with multiple abiotic stress tolerance and 22 elite mutant lines ready for National Cooperativ­e Testing (NCT) nomination, as well as 11 mutant lines currently evaluated by NCT, three lines with distinct traits for Plant Varietal Protection (PVP) applicatio­n, and 12 rice tungro resistant lines for validation.

He also emphasized the importance of breeding stress-resistant varieties in helping the farmers enhance their yield in rice farming under stress condition.

“A farmer’s aim is to gain income, and as rice breeders, our goal is to help them achieve that by producing varieties like these. The best thing about these stress- resistant varieties is that whether there is stress or none, they can still produce yield no matter what,” Cabusora stressed.

As of now, there are other 11 stressresi­stant mutant varieties from the Philippine­s that are registered on the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Mutant Variety Database (MVD).

These are: BPI-121-407, PARC 1, PARC 2, BPI Ri-10, PSB Rc 78, Milagrosa mutant, Azmil mutant, Bengawan mutant, PR22902, NSIC Rc272 (Sahod Ulan 2) and NSIC Rc346 (Sahod Ulan 11). The last two varieties were bred by PhilRice.

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