(1) There are three genera of rice: Oryza, Zizania and Porteresia. The latter genera are wild rice, with Zizania eaten in North America and Porteresia in Bangladesh. Oryza has about twenty species, the most important being Oryza sativa (Asian rice) or Oryza glaberrima (African rice). Oryza sativa has two subspecies: japonica (short grain) and indica (long grain).
(2) In the midst of Green Revolution, how high-yield rice IR8 was created. By cross breeding. Please recall that Green Revolution is all about dwarf stalks which--compared with the traditional ones with long stalks--yield grains more quickly, spend less nutrients on the stalks as opposed to grains, and support the weight of grains.
Tom Hargrove and W Ronnie Coffman, Breeding History. Rice Today, October-December, 2006, 35-38 www.goldenrice.org/PDFs/Breeding_History_Sept_2006.pdf
(at 37: “Seeds from the F1 plants were sown in the field, and produced about 10,000 second-generation (F2) plants that segregated by height in a ratio of three talls to one dwarf. Dr Jennings immediately recognized this as a Mendelian ratio—named after Gregor Mendel, who became known as the father of genetics for his 19th-century research into the inheritance of traits in pea plants. This was a key result—it meant that dwarfism in DGWG was controlled by a single gene and was therefore simply inherited, making the job of developing a commercially usable semidwarf variety immeasurably easier")
Sarah Whalen, The father of 'miracle rice' turns 100. Asia Times, Sept 27, 2006
www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HI27Ae01.html
(“By 1960, Rockefeller Foundation scientists in India found a Taiwanese variety with a high yield, but also with a high susceptibility to pests. That same year, the Rockefeller and Ford foundations pooled resources and set up a new research center, the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines. IRRI hired a Taiwanese plant geneticist, Te Tzu Chang, to study the variety's genes, and the American scientists made numerous crosses, creating a new generation of plants that eventually produced a dwarf variety. Two years later [1962], IRRI hired Beachell, who then selected plants resulting in a semi-dwarf rice, IR8 - a ‘super’ [hybrid] rice”)
* Taichung Native 1 (TN1) 台中在來1號
* “Dee-geo-woo-gen 低腳烏尖 from China, a parent of TN1”
* TT Chang 張德慈
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._T._Chang
(1927-2006; born in Shanghai; University of Nanking with BSA in 1949)
* Henry "Hank" Beachell (1906-2006; American)
(D) YUAN Longping‘s 袁隆平 hybrid rice, released in 1974, was something else.
(v) Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 was awarded to “father of the Green Revolution" Norman BORLAUG alone.
(1914-2009; American; PhD from University of Minnesota in 1942; in Mexico developed semi-dwarf, high-yield, disease-resistant wheat varieties) Wikipedia
|