Saturday, January 13, 2018

Weedy rice is growing problem for California farmers Weedy rice was offici


     
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Weedy rice displayTodd Fitchette
Weedy rice was brought to the attention of California rice growers again in 2016 after it was first discovered in three fields in the northern Sacramento Valley. Since then it has been identified in at least 10,000 acres across the state's growing region.

Weedy rice is growing problem for California farmers

Weedy rice was officially documented in California about 2006. Today, it's found on about 10,000 acres of California rice
California rice growers are discovering a challenge in their fields that some thought was merely herbicide-resistant watergrass.
Last year, newly-hired University of California (UC) Cooperative Extension Rice Advisor Whitney Brim-DeForest began receiving calls from rice growers about a weed they couldn’t kill. This led to the quick discovery that watergrass wasn’t the problem.
Since the beginning of the 2016 growing season, at least 10,000 acres of rice ground in California has been identified with weedy rice, one of the most damaging weeds of rice worldwide.
As growers began reporting the problem to farm advisors and the California Rice Commission (CRC), UC teamed with the CRC to help growers understand what weedy rice is and what it's not. Knowing what it’s not can reassure growers concerned with regulatory constraints.
Since it is not considered something requiring state or federal quarantines, growers can be rest assured that “there are no repercussions because it’s just rice,” she said.
The issue is simply one of what markets will tolerate in terms of contamination in the milled product.
Shortly after assuming her post in 2016 Brim-DeForest was made aware of the widespread nature of weedy rice in California fields. What was first thought to be just a “spotty” problem found in a handful of fields in the northern Sacramento Valley quickly became identified across 10,000 acres of rice statewide.
Brim-DeForest searched through journals and other publications on the topic. She quickly discovered that weedy rice, or red rice (known for this by its color), is of the same genus and species as cultivated rice, albeit an unwelcome one. Because of this, it does not present a human health risk if it is mixed with the cultivated rice chain.
The challenge is it cannot be controlled by approved herbicides.
According to UC, it can significantly affect yield and quality. Yields in the Mid-South have been reduced by 60 percent where this is present.
Brim-DeForest’s study of weedy rice reveals that it was rediscovered in California in 2006. Historic records show it was present before 1950, but little was said about it since then.
A 2008 survey of rice in the Sacramento Valley turned up three fields with it. Then the Rice Research Board and CRC set up a task force to look into the issue, but it quickly “fell off the radar” of those in the rice industry, she said.
Though some pest control advisers were starting to see something and were bringing samples into the Rice Experiment Station in Richvale, Calif., Brim-DeForest says there was no official mechanism to track weedy rice until years later when it was beginning to show up as a more widespread problem.
Rice mills surveyed by UC said they’d seen it “for years,” she said, but reported some confusion in identifying it because there are red-colored rice bran varieties that the industry purposefully grows for certain markets.
“A lot of folks thought it was just contamination from colored rice,” Brim-DeForest said.
Identification and treatment
In cooperation with UC, the CRC produced a website at http://caweedyrice.com/ to help growers and PCAs identify the problem and understand what to do if growers think it might be in their fields. Growers can subscribe on the website for e-mail updates.
UC has now established a set of best management practices for weedy rice, which propagates itself by shattering easily and leaving seed on the soil. According to Brim-DeForest, this seed can lay dormant for many years before germinating.
Weedy rice is easiest to identify at the heading stage, though it is possible to identify before that. UC rice advisors can help in this identification. The weedy rice website can also be helpful.
Because weedy rice shatters easily, Brim-DeForest does not recommend growers or PCAs pull samples themselves and transport them for identification. Contact the farm advisor’s office to get instructions on how to have it identified.
Though it’s not easy, weedy rice can be controlled, according to Luis Espino, UC rice farming systems advisor for Colusa, Glenn and Yolo counties.
Espino is working with growers to do just that. One grower he continues to work with fallowed a 15-acre check in his field for two seasons while employing practices recommended by university researchers.
In this case, the grower fallowed the check, did minimal ground work including running a disc and roller on the field before flushing the field with irrigation water to germinate weeds, including the weedy rice.
With the weeds germinated, the grower applied glyphosate to the fallowed field in two separate applications. Though glyphosate is not a registered product for use in rice, Espino says its use on fallowed rice ground is permitted.
Glyphosate was applied over two seasons to the fallowed field, killing many of the weeds present.
After two seasons, the grower replanted the field in rice. When the rice began to head, he hand-rogued the remaining weedy rice in the field. This appears to have had a positive impact on the grower’s weed pressure, Espino says.
Burning rice fields after harvest has not proven successful, though Brim-DeForest thinks a sufficiently hot fire could have an impact. Because of current air district rules and the spotty effects of rice stubble burning with respect to weedy rice seed, Espino says UC does not recommend burning as a control or treatment method.
The UC will host meetings later in the growing season to update growers on weedy rice.
Growers in Placer, Sacramento, Sutter, Yuba and Butte counties who suspect weedy rice in fields can contact Brim-DeForest at (530) 822-7515. Growers in Colusa, Glenn and Yolo counties should contact Espino at (530) 458-0570. Those in San Joaquin County can call Michelle Leinfelder-Miles at (209) 953-6120.http://www.westernfarmpress.com/rice/weedy-rice-growing-problem-california-farmers

Friday, January 12, 2018

Rice R&D News Global r&d News


Rice Related R&D News

R&D investments seen to boost rice output
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Louise Maureen Simeon (The Philippine Star) - September 9, 2017 - 4:00pm
MANILA, Philippines — The government should invest more in agricultural research and development if it wants to achieve rice competitiveness in this administration, according to an economist.
University of the Philippines School of Economics professor Emmanuel Esguerra said the government’s goal to attain a competitive rice economy by 2022 should be backed by cutting-edge agriculture innovations guided by science-based and supportive policies.
“Producing rice in the Philippines is more expensive than in our neighboring exporting countries such as Vietnam and Thailand,” he said.
In the Philippines, the cost of producing palay (unmilled rice) is around P10-12 per kilo as against the P6 to P10 per kilo in Vietnam and Thailand.

“Some of the factors that contribute to the higher cost of rice production include labor cost and machinery, low yield per hectare, and high marketing costs,” Esguerra said.
“High prices harm poor Filipino households more than anyone else. These households spend around 20 percent of their incomes on rice alone,” he added.
Furthermore, Esguerra emphasized that the role of rice science and innovation is essential in attaining competitiveness and inclusive growth.
“There is also a need to understand the reasons for rice farmers in choosing a certain technology,” he said.
“Technological adoption is a tricky business that requires the collective wisdom of science and social science communities for the farmers,” Esguerra added.
The Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Agricultural Research continues to intensify its research and development programs for various agribusiness sectors, including rice.
“Many of the bureau’s R&D projects align with our need to develop crops that can withstand the logistical and phytosanitary requirements as we move towards promoting Philippine agricultural products in the wider, global market,” BAR said.
“With the right technology that will help nurture the crops, we can also address the challenges of seasonal supply and climate change,” it added.

Read more at http://beta.philstar.com/business/2017/09/09/1737375/rd-investments-seen-boost-rice-output#HIj4C4kw8yPCC9od.99http://beta.philstar.com/business/2017/09/09/1737375/rd-investments-seen-boost-rice-output

Step up R&D on rice farming, DOST tells state scientists

 / 12:14 AM September 15, 2016
The Department of Science and Technology called for state scientists to ramp up research and development activities that were more accessible to farmers to support rice security in the country.
“Whether the cost that we have invested have generated the desired benefits, we still have to see that these are adapted on a wider scale with the goal of reaching more rice and rice farming communities nationwide towards achieving a rice secure Philippines,” Science Secretary Fortunato T. dela Peña said in a statement.
Speaking to staff of the Philippine Rice Research Institute last week, Dela Peña cited the outputs of rice R&D and the industry’s role in helping the country’s rice sector.
“In a country where rice is a staple food, nothing compares for an ordinary citizen than to be assured of having an affordable, accessible, high-quality, and nutritious rice at all times,” he said.
Dela Peña was referring to technologies developed under the Rice Industry Strategic S&T Program, which supports efforts to achieve self-sufficiency in rice production by 2020.
The program is a partnership among government agencies PhilRice, Philippine Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization (PhilMech), Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development (PCCARD), Metal Industry Research and Development Center and the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB).
Among these technologies is the use of certified seeds, bio-stimulants and elicitors, and efficient use of fertilizers and water were targeted to increase productivity by 10 percent while reducing production cost by 5 percen


Read more: http://business.inquirer.net/214914/step-up-rd-on-rice-farming-dost-tells-state-scientists#ixzz53y9ZQJKe
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PH needs more investments for rice R&D

Published 
By Madelaine B. Miraflor
Despite the Philippine government’s intense campaign towards rice self-sufficiency, investments to make the country’s yield more globally competitive are still not enough.
Economist Emmanuel Esguerra said there is still a need for the government to invest more in agricultural research and development (R&D) to achieve rice competitiveness.
To recall, after giving the agriculture sector a significant boost in the first half, the country’s main staples — palay and corn — are now expected to yield unprecedented production results by the end of this year, thanks to ample water supply and availability of planting materials.
The probable production of both palay and corn crops for July to December 2017 is now seen to rise to 6.76 percent and 6.11 percent, respectively.
For the entire calendar year, palay and corn outputs may even accelerate by 9.06 percent and 11.08 percent, respectively, compared with 2016 levels.
These projections came after these staples yielded impressive production in the first half of the year.
Despite higher yields, Esguerra pointed out that farmers across the country still struggle under the weight of high production cost.
He pointed out that producing rice in the Philippines is more expensive than in our neighboring exporting countries such as Vietnam and Thailand. Some of the factors that contribute to the higher cost of rice production include labor cost and machinery, low yield per hectare, and high marketing costs.
“High prices harm poor Filipino households more than anyone else. These households spend around 20 percent of their incomes on rice alone,” said Esguerra, who serves as a professor at the UP School of Economics (UPSE), said.





27/02/12

Plan to boost African rice R&D unveiled

[ACCRA] A research strategy to help boost rice production in Africa has been formally unveiled by the Africa Rice Center (AfricaRice), a pan-African agricultural research organisation.
The ten-year plan, launched this month (1 February) aims to help the continent become nearly 90 per cent self-sufficient in rice production by 2020, with at least ten countries expected to full meet their own needs.
This will be achieved through setting seven priorities for research.
These include providing farmers with climate-resilient rice varieties; expanding rice-producing areas while addressing environmental concerns; creating market opportunities for smallholders; and linking up with development partners and the private sector to stimulate the uptake of rice knowledge and technologies.
The plan will largely be implemented under the Global Rice Science Partnership, a research programme of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research that launched in November 2010.
Papa Abdoulaye Seck, director-general of AfricaRice, told SciDev.Net: "AfricaRice's new Strategic goal is to realise Africa's tremendous rice potential, as the centre strongly believes the continent has the wherewithal be it human, physical and economic, to produce enough rice to feed itself".
It is hoped that rice production in Sub-Saharan Africa will increase from 18.4 million tons in 2010 to 46.8 million tons by 2020, and that research and development will also be boosted by the training of 30 PhD and MSc students and 100 technicians a year.
Seck said that the project costs are estimated at US$420 million. However a further US$1.2 billion will be needed to fully implement the strategy.
The funding will come from a number of donors including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Department for International Development (DFID), and the World Bank. Full funding has not yet been secured as donors are still honouring their pledges, Seck said.
Key players in implementing the strategy will be scientists from national agricultural programmes in the 24 member states in Sub-Saharan Africa that belong to AfricaRice.
"Such a project is usually challenging in the face of adequate funds and staff, lack of adaptable and consumer-preferred varieties and access to rudimentary tools for production," Godfrey Asea, plant breeder at the National Agricultural Research Organization, in Uganda, told SciDev.Net.  
The Ghanaian deputy minister for food and agriculture, Yaw Effah-Baafi, said the scheme would assist countries like Ghana, which spends US$450 million per year on importing rice to meet some 70 per cent of local demand.  
The strategy was approved last September at the meeting of the AfricaRice's Council of Ministers, who also approved the launch of an Africa-wide task forces set up to accelerate delivery of rice technologies.
See below for a video of the GRiSP Africa Rice Task Force Launch: