New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam

Although Vietnam is the second largest rice exporter in the world, the country has only recently met the demand for sustainable food supply at a national level, and not yet at a household one. In the early 1970s, the average rice yield in the Mekong River Delta (MRD) was 1.9 tons/ ha and the annual...

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Main Authors: Chi Buu Bui, Thi Lang Nguyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vietnam Ministry of Science and Technology 2017-06-01
Series:Vietnam Journal of Science, Technology and Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vietnamscience.vjst.vn/index.php/vjste/article/view/299
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author Chi Buu Bui
Thi Lang Nguyen
author_facet Chi Buu Bui
Thi Lang Nguyen
author_sort Chi Buu Bui
collection DOAJ
description Although Vietnam is the second largest rice exporter in the world, the country has only recently met the demand for sustainable food supply at a national level, and not yet at a household one. In the early 1970s, the average rice yield in the Mekong River Delta (MRD) was 1.9 tons/ ha and the annual production weighed 4 million tons. The current rice productivity and production has gained over 6 tons/ha and 24 million tons/year, respectively. This is a substantial increase. This progress in the MRD is in brief, due mostly to (1) Government policy, (2) Water management, and (3) Technological innovation and application with an emphasis on varietal improvement. As an impact of the ongoing El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon, severe droughts and salinity intrusion has been occurring in Vietnam’s MRD and has caused varying degrees of damage to agriculture, fisheries and the livelihoods of people in the region. New rice genotypes have been released via both conventional breeding and marker-assisted selection. The introgression of target genes from wild species viz. Oryza officinalis, O. australiensis, O. rufipogon into cultivars has been conducted successfully. Commercial rice varieties, which are currently growing in the MRD for export, are listed as Jasmine 85, OM3536, OM4900, IR64, OM6162, ST3, ST5...
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spelling doaj.art-d34cc796aa4d4464bb3cda5dcf09b5af2023-02-01T08:22:47ZengVietnam Ministry of Science and TechnologyVietnam Journal of Science, Technology and Engineering2525-24612615-99372017-06-0159210.31276/VJSTE.59(2).30New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of VietnamChi Buu Bui0Thi Lang Nguyen1Institute of Agricultural Sciences for Southern Vietnam (IAS), VietnamCuu Long Delta Rice Research Institute (CLRRI), Vietnam Although Vietnam is the second largest rice exporter in the world, the country has only recently met the demand for sustainable food supply at a national level, and not yet at a household one. In the early 1970s, the average rice yield in the Mekong River Delta (MRD) was 1.9 tons/ ha and the annual production weighed 4 million tons. The current rice productivity and production has gained over 6 tons/ha and 24 million tons/year, respectively. This is a substantial increase. This progress in the MRD is in brief, due mostly to (1) Government policy, (2) Water management, and (3) Technological innovation and application with an emphasis on varietal improvement. As an impact of the ongoing El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon, severe droughts and salinity intrusion has been occurring in Vietnam’s MRD and has caused varying degrees of damage to agriculture, fisheries and the livelihoods of people in the region. New rice genotypes have been released via both conventional breeding and marker-assisted selection. The introgression of target genes from wild species viz. Oryza officinalis, O. australiensis, O. rufipogon into cultivars has been conducted successfully. Commercial rice varieties, which are currently growing in the MRD for export, are listed as Jasmine 85, OM3536, OM4900, IR64, OM6162, ST3, ST5... https://vietnamscience.vjst.vn/index.php/vjste/article/view/299climate changeEl Ninogene introgressionmarker-assisted selectionwild rice
spellingShingle Chi Buu Bui
Thi Lang Nguyen
New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam
Vietnam Journal of Science, Technology and Engineering
climate change
El Nino
gene introgression
marker-assisted selection
wild rice
title New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam
title_full New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam
title_fullStr New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam
title_short New rice varieties adapted to climate change in the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam
title_sort new rice varieties adapted to climate change in the mekong river delta of vietnam
topic climate change
El Nino
gene introgression
marker-assisted selection
wild rice
url https://vietnamscience.vjst.vn/index.php/vjste/article/view/299
work_keys_str_mv AT chibuubui newricevarietiesadaptedtoclimatechangeinthemekongriverdeltaofvietnam
AT thilangnguyen newricevarietiesadaptedtoclimatechangeinthemekongriverdeltaofvietnam