Perennial Rice : In Search of a Greener, Hardier Staple Crop by Winifred Bird : Yale Environment 360

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  • Perennial Rice: In Search of a Greener, Hardier Staple Crop
    http://e360.yale.edu/feature/perennial_rice_in_search_of_a_greener_hardier_staple_crop/2853

    Ten thousand years ago, China’s ancient inhabitants harvested the grains of wild rice, a perennial grass growing up to 15 feet tall in bogs and streams. The grains were small and red, maturing in waves and often shattering into the water. Their descendants transformed that grain into the high-yielding annual crop that today feeds half the world’s population. When agronomist F. H. King toured China’s meticulously maintained rice terraces in 1909, he called the men and women who tilled them “farmers of forty centuries.” To him, they seemed to have unlocked the secret to perennial rice conserving soil and maintaining agricultural fertility indefinitely. [...]

    An international network of scientists is working toward a radical solution: perennial rice that yields grain for many years without replanting. By crossing domesticated rice with its wild predecessors, they hope to create deep-rooted varieties that hold soils in place, require less labor, and survive extremes of temperature and water supply. Plant breeders have been trying to do the same for wheat, sorghum, and other crops for decades.

    #riz #riz_perpetuel